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Bearhawk
Tailwheels LLC Destructive Testing of
our Bearhawk Tailwheels
In
July of 2011, before selling our tailwheels to the public, we put them
through a full battery of testing, both in the shop and in the field on
flying aircraft. The following pictures show the shop testing we did on
the tailwheels. Both mounting types (Leaf Spring as well as the Tapered
Rod Spring) were subjected to this rigorous test procedure. The goal
was to determine whether or not these tailwheels could stand up to
worse-case scenarios over rough terrain (or extremely rough
landings).The tailwheels we tested were fitted with the longer 10"
tailwheel forks and tire to give the tested tailwheels the maximum
leverage on the forks. This allowed us to to see if they would stand up
to the pressure. A fixture was created to mount the tailwheel to actual
tailsprings and to apply pressure, just like they might experience when
mounted on an airplane.
Hydraulic pressure was applied to simulate a worst-case landing scenario. The amount of deflection was a minimum of 4" to 5" which is the equivilant to the tailsping bending enough to hit the bottom of the rudder. What happened? In our tests, there was no bending, no breaking and no fracturing of any of our tailwheel assemblies. The Bearhawk Tailwheels passed with flying colors! Below are some photos taken during the testing process.
Here is a close-up of the tire
and how compressed it was. The tire was inflated to 50 psi for these
tests: Next installed the 1 1/2" Leaf Spring version of the 10" Bearhawk Tailwheel and tested it the same way:
And here it is with 5" of
deflection applied: In
the picture above you can see the ruler now reads 12" for a total
deflection of 5". Again, there was no bending, breaking or deformation
of the tailwheel assembly or any of it's components. |