AirTalk.org Forum Index AirTalk.org
Aviation discussions newsgroups
 
Archives   FAQFAQ   SearchSearch   MemberlistMemberlist   UsergroupsUsergroups   RegisterRegister 
 ProfileProfile   Log in to check your private messagesLog in to check your private messages   Log inLog in 

Adjustment driver for King VOR head

 
Post new topic   Reply to topic    AirTalk.org Forum Index -> Aviators (General Discussions)
View previous topic :: View next topic  
Author Message
Robert M. Gary
Guest





PostPosted: Sun Aug 21, 2005 10:38 pm    Post subject: Adjustment driver for King VOR head Reply with quote



My #2 VOR is the older analog King head feed by a KX-170B. It likes to
get out of adjustment. The local radio shop has told me I should get
the screw driver and adjust it myself off the VOT. If you remove the
set screw that holds the knob on, there is an adjustment screw behind
it. However, the head on that screw is very, very strange and therefore
requires a special driver.

Does anyone know where I can find such a driver??

-Robert

Back to top
RST Engineering
Guest





PostPosted: Sun Aug 21, 2005 10:46 pm    Post subject: Re: Adjustment driver for King VOR head Reply with quote



As I recall, that is a regular (albeit very small) slot head screw. What it
is after twenty or thirty years of diddling with it is anybody's guess.

Jim



"Robert M. Gary" <rmg1 (AT) my-deja (DOT) com> wrote

Quote:
My #2 VOR is the older analog King head feed by a KX-170B. It likes to
get out of adjustment. The local radio shop has told me I should get
the screw driver and adjust it myself off the VOT. If you remove the
set screw that holds the knob on, there is an adjustment screw behind
it. However, the head on that screw is very, very strange and therefore
requires a special driver.

Does anyone know where I can find such a driver??

-Robert




Back to top
Mike Rapoport
Guest





PostPosted: Mon Aug 22, 2005 1:26 pm    Post subject: Re: Adjustment driver for King VOR head Reply with quote



Is it a spline driver? If it is, they are availible at www.mcmastercarr.com

Mike
MU-2
"Robert M. Gary" <rmg1 (AT) my-deja (DOT) com> wrote

Quote:
My #2 VOR is the older analog King head feed by a KX-170B. It likes to
get out of adjustment. The local radio shop has told me I should get
the screw driver and adjust it myself off the VOT. If you remove the
set screw that holds the knob on, there is an adjustment screw behind
it. However, the head on that screw is very, very strange and therefore
requires a special driver.

Does anyone know where I can find such a driver??

-Robert




Back to top
OtisWinslow
Guest





PostPosted: Mon Aug 22, 2005 2:08 pm    Post subject: Re: Adjustment driver for King VOR head Reply with quote

Just go to Sears and get a long necked thin blade one and file
the blade a little on the ends. Works great. Adjust it in the
air too all the way around a VOR station.



"Robert M. Gary" <rmg1 (AT) my-deja (DOT) com> wrote

Quote:
My #2 VOR is the older analog King head feed by a KX-170B. It likes to
get out of adjustment. The local radio shop has told me I should get
the screw driver and adjust it myself off the VOT. If you remove the
set screw that holds the knob on, there is an adjustment screw behind
it. However, the head on that screw is very, very strange and therefore
requires a special driver.

Does anyone know where I can find such a driver??

-Robert




Back to top
RST Engineering
Guest





PostPosted: Mon Aug 22, 2005 7:58 pm    Post subject: Re: Adjustment driver for King VOR head Reply with quote

I use a piece of 1/8 " brass brazing rod 6" long with one end filed down to
a screwdriver blade and shrink sleeving (for traction) on the other end.
Use it on both VOR/LOC alignment AND compass swinging. It has been in the
toolbox since the PSA days back in the mid-60s. It's about an inch shorter
than when I first made it due to "periodic calibration" of the tip.

Jim



"OtisWinslow" <OtisWinslow (AT) hotmail (DOT) com> wrote


Quote:
Just go to Sears and get a long necked thin blade one and file
the blade a little on the ends. Works great. Adjust it in the
air too all the way around a VOR station.



Back to top
OtisWinslow
Guest





PostPosted: Tue Aug 23, 2005 7:09 pm    Post subject: Re: Adjustment driver for King VOR head Reply with quote

Good idea. I've done the brass rod trick for a compass .. didn't think to
use it for VOR too.


"RST Engineering" <jim (AT) rstengineering (DOT) com> wrote

Quote:
I use a piece of 1/8 " brass brazing rod 6" long with one end filed down to
a screwdriver blade and shrink sleeving (for traction) on the other end.
Use it on both VOR/LOC alignment AND compass swinging. It has been in the
toolbox since the PSA days back in the mid-60s. It's about an inch shorter
than when I first made it due to "periodic calibration" of the tip.

Jim



"OtisWinslow" <OtisWinslow (AT) hotmail (DOT) com> wrote in message
news:c%kOe.78760$0_.14840 (AT) fe04 (DOT) news.easynews.com...

Just go to Sears and get a long necked thin blade one and file
the blade a little on the ends. Works great. Adjust it in the
air too all the way around a VOR station.





Back to top
Mike Rapoport
Guest





PostPosted: Tue Aug 23, 2005 8:34 pm    Post subject: Re: Adjustment driver for King VOR head Reply with quote

You guys are making me feel stupid for buying a brass screwdriver.

Mike
MU-2


"OtisWinslow" <OtisWinslow (AT) hotmail (DOT) com> wrote

Quote:
Good idea. I've done the brass rod trick for a compass .. didn't think to
use it for VOR too.


"RST Engineering" <jim (AT) rstengineering (DOT) com> wrote in message
news:11gkbil7mctap95 (AT) corp (DOT) supernews.com...
I use a piece of 1/8 " brass brazing rod 6" long with one end filed down
to a screwdriver blade and shrink sleeving (for traction) on the other
end. Use it on both VOR/LOC alignment AND compass swinging. It has been
in the toolbox since the PSA days back in the mid-60s. It's about an inch
shorter than when I first made it due to "periodic calibration" of the
tip.

Jim



"OtisWinslow" <OtisWinslow (AT) hotmail (DOT) com> wrote in message
news:c%kOe.78760$0_.14840 (AT) fe04 (DOT) news.easynews.com...

Just go to Sears and get a long necked thin blade one and file
the blade a little on the ends. Works great. Adjust it in the
air too all the way around a VOR station.







Back to top
George Patterson
Guest





PostPosted: Tue Aug 23, 2005 8:46 pm    Post subject: Re: Adjustment driver for King VOR head Reply with quote

Mike Rapoport wrote:
Quote:
You guys are making me feel stupid for buying a brass screwdriver.

Well, don't feel that way. Just because *their* time isn't worth anything
doesn't mean that yours isn't either.

George Patterson
Give a person a fish and you feed him for a day; teach a person to
use the Internet and he won't bother you for weeks.

Back to top
Gig 601XL Builder
Guest





PostPosted: Tue Aug 23, 2005 8:51 pm    Post subject: Mike Rapoport Reply with quote

What's your take on all this "Ground the MU-2" crap coming out of the
Colorado congress criters?


Back to top
Steven P. McNicoll
Guest





PostPosted: Tue Aug 23, 2005 8:57 pm    Post subject: Re: Mike Rapoport Reply with quote


"Gig 601XL Builder" <wr.giacona@coxDOTnet> wrote

Quote:

What's your take on all this "Ground the MU-2" crap coming out of the
Colorado congress criters?

What are the Colorado congress critters saying about the MU-2?



Back to top
Mike Rapoport
Guest





PostPosted: Tue Aug 23, 2005 11:01 pm    Post subject: Re: Mike Rapoport Reply with quote


"Gig 601XL Builder" <wr.giacona@coxDOTnet> wrote

Quote:
What's your take on all this "Ground the MU-2" crap coming out of the
Colorado congress criters?

It is being driven by a lawyer in Texas that has sued Mitsubishi numerous

times in the past. He got the family of someone killed in one of the CO
crashes to get the CO congressmen to write the letters to the FAA. All this
is setting up for a lawsuit. This also puts the FAA in a difficult
position. The airplane has been flying 38yrs, made millions of flights,
meets the certification requirements and doesn't have the worst accident
record in its class, however the FAA obviously cannot ignore Congress. I
predict that the end result will be a type rating requirement on the MU-2
which is something that Mitsubishi has been pushing for a long time.
Basically every pilot would be required to take an ATP flight test in the
airplane before being allowed to be PIC just like a jet. I don't have the
data, but apparantly there is a huge difference in accident rates between
those who have regular recurrent simiulator training and those who do not.

Mike
MU-2



Back to top
Mike Rapoport
Guest





PostPosted: Wed Aug 24, 2005 12:06 am    Post subject: Re: Mike Rapoport Reply with quote

They are saying that it is unsafe. The whole thing is being driven by a
lawyer who is going to represent the family of one of fatal crashes in CO.

It is sometimes pathetic how our system works. Lawyers try to create lots
of smoke so that they can convince the jury that there was a fire and by the
time a proper investigation is done the lawsuit is already decided. A
perfect example was the breast implant case wherein a gigantic award was
made before an unbiased government study found that they were safe. It is
the same in aviation where the best information (NTSB reports) are not
permitted into evidence.

Mike
MU-2


"Steven P. McNicoll" <roncachamp (AT) earthlink (DOT) net> wrote

Quote:

"Gig 601XL Builder" <wr.giacona@coxDOTnet> wrote in message
news:8%LOe.2929$Ix4.2120 (AT) okepread03 (DOT) ..

What's your take on all this "Ground the MU-2" crap coming out of the
Colorado congress criters?

What are the Colorado congress critters saying about the MU-2?





Back to top
Scott D
Guest





PostPosted: Wed Aug 24, 2005 5:34 am    Post subject: Re: Mike Rapoport Reply with quote

On Tue, 23 Aug 2005 23:01:19 GMT, "Mike Rapoport"
<rapopor1 (AT) ix (DOT) netcom.com> wrote:

Quote:

"Gig 601XL Builder" <wr.giacona@coxDOTnet> wrote in message
news:8%LOe.2929$Ix4.2120 (AT) okepread03 (DOT) ..
What's your take on all this "Ground the MU-2" crap coming out of the
Colorado congress criters?

It is being driven by a lawyer in Texas that has sued Mitsubishi numerous
times in the past. He got the family of someone killed in one of the CO
crashes to get the CO congressmen to write the letters to the FAA. All this
is setting up for a lawsuit.

I was thinking of you Mike the other day when I heard about this smoke
and mirror thing about the MU-2 on the radio. I live between COS and
APA and I can say that the weather when this last crash happened about
2 weeks ago was poor. Very low ceilings and convective activity was
in the area.when the crash occurred. I believe they found the crash
about 2 miles away from the approach end. This does have an earmark
as pilot error from hearing the scuttlebutt around the airport, but we
shall see what the NTSB has to say.

I haven't heard which client this lawyer is representing but from the
descriptions that I have heard pertaining to both accidents, I don't
believe that either had anything in common with each other. The other
crash happened in December and if I recall correctly, he lost an
engine just after takeoff and didn't make it back to the field.

Scott D.


Back to top
Mike Rapoport
Guest





PostPosted: Wed Aug 24, 2005 1:14 pm    Post subject: Re: Mike Rapoport Reply with quote


<Scott D> wrote

Quote:
On Tue, 23 Aug 2005 23:01:19 GMT, "Mike Rapoport"
[email]rapopor1 (AT) ix (DOT) netcom.com[/email]> wrote:


"Gig 601XL Builder" <wr.giacona@coxDOTnet> wrote in message
news:8%LOe.2929$Ix4.2120 (AT) okepread03 (DOT) ..
What's your take on all this "Ground the MU-2" crap coming out of the
Colorado congress criters?

It is being driven by a lawyer in Texas that has sued Mitsubishi numerous
times in the past. He got the family of someone killed in one of the CO
crashes to get the CO congressmen to write the letters to the FAA. All
this
is setting up for a lawsuit.

I was thinking of you Mike the other day when I heard about this smoke
and mirror thing about the MU-2 on the radio. I live between COS and
APA and I can say that the weather when this last crash happened about
2 weeks ago was poor. Very low ceilings and convective activity was
in the area.when the crash occurred. I believe they found the crash
about 2 miles away from the approach end. This does have an earmark
as pilot error from hearing the scuttlebutt around the airport, but we
shall see what the NTSB has to say.

I haven't heard which client this lawyer is representing but from the
descriptions that I have heard pertaining to both accidents, I don't
believe that either had anything in common with each other. The other
crash happened in December and if I recall correctly, he lost an
engine just after takeoff and didn't make it back to the field.

Scott D.


I agree. The more recent crash sounds like CFIT.

Mike
MU-2



Back to top
Display posts from previous:   
Post new topic   Reply to topic    AirTalk.org Forum Index -> Aviators (General Discussions) All times are GMT
Page 1 of 1

 
Jump to:  
You cannot post new topics in this forum
You cannot reply to topics in this forum
You cannot edit your posts in this forum
You cannot delete your posts in this forum
You cannot vote in polls in this forum


Powered by phpBB © 2001, 2006 phpBB Group
SEO toolkit © 2004-2006 webmedic.