Sebastian_G wrote:
I was actually told Bogert makes an adapter which goes into the axle nowadays
That seems to be it. Needs a standard bottle jack to operate:
https://bogertaviation.com/products/piper-pa-46-jack-pad?variant=39339157061743
I am currently doing the annual on the Jetprop so was able to dig out my jacking adapters from my travelling spares stash.
I have never thankfully had to use the nose wheel adapter, but have had occasion to use the main gear one a couple of times. Works like a charm.
These were fabricated by a local engineering shop.
I still need to use the tribal Jack with the low lift plate to lift the wheel since the clearance to the floor is very short and unless you can find a miniature bottle Jack l think you struggle to get a normal one to fit under that space.
Cheers. E
If you can’t fit a bottle jack under. a toe jack should work. Either with an extra lug welded on at your required height or just spaced up as needed.
eal wrote:
the clearance to the floor is very short
Can you not turn the adapter 180 degrees in the axle to raise the jacking point? it would also provide for a more stable jacking configuration.
Can you not turn the adapter 180 degrees in the axle to raise the jacking point? it would also provide for a more stable jacking configuration.
The adapters are keyed due to the retaining bolts inside the axle, so currently only fit one way. They were actually custom designed to match the Tribal Jack and are deliberately low to avoid having to jack up too far. If l were using a different jack then they could easily be redone to accommodate a higher clearance.
Cheers. E
I made some progress on the PA46 jack:
It is a combination of those items:
https://www.amazon.de/gp/product/B07FPC7YP3
https://bogertaviation.com/products/pa-46-pin-floor-jack-adapter
https://bogertaviation.com/products/pa-46-main-gear-pin
So far it seems to work well. It is 3,4kg including the wrench. It can pick up the axle very low if the tire is flat and it raises the plane quite a lot if required.
I like the idea of a screw jack versus a hydraulic jack because it won’t sink over time while you’re repairing the tire.