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Angier asks about any concerns with hydraulic pressure bleeding off to zero
over
a week or so...
I don't think there is. I have my plane on jackstands and had the wheels up
for that amount of time recently. The pressure started at about 1000 psi and
fairly quickly bled down to 500-600 lbs (few hours). Next day it was
around 400
psi and none of the wheels had started to fall. After a week the pressure
indicated 100-200 psi but the gage dial accuracy is anybody's guess (panel
mounted, refurbed gages). After a week the nose gear had started down (about
2-3 inches measured at the wheel). I would have taken a long long time
for the
wheels to come down on their own because that is a lot of fluid to be
displaced
through whatever minor leak might exist. I still have air in the system
too.
If the pressure holds above the pump cut-in pressure (looks like about 800 psi
on the high pressure circuit) for a 3 hour flight, I'd be quite satisfied.
Regards,
Ed de Chazal
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