myshed2 Posted February 25, 2020 Posted February 25, 2020 I found this on the ground under my plane while working on the engine (2200 Jab). Does anyone know what it is or where it might have come from. Its a worry!!!
Bryon Posted February 25, 2020 Posted February 25, 2020 I knew there would be one..... and you beat me to it Marty
myshed2 Posted February 26, 2020 Author Posted February 26, 2020 I was going to put in my original query. The clip NOT THE 50 CENTS.
kgwilson Posted February 26, 2020 Posted February 26, 2020 Never seen a clip like this on any Jabiru engine. I have no idea what it would be used for.
Jaba-who Posted February 26, 2020 Posted February 26, 2020 Bit hard to tell. Can you take another photo in focus. it looks a bit like a retained nut housing that’s been opened up and lost the nut. but then it appears to have some sort of film covering the hole where the screw goes through. So that would negate the first suggestion. But as I said it’s s but hard to tell. Never seen a clip like this on any Jabiru engine. I have no idea what it would be used for.
cherk Posted February 26, 2020 Posted February 26, 2020 Looks a bit like a panel blanking plug........of some sort !
onetrack Posted February 26, 2020 Posted February 26, 2020 My money is on a retention clip of some kind. But did it actually drop out of the aircraft? - or was it flung under there, when it was thrown off some other device? (lawn and garden equipment?).
Red Posted February 26, 2020 Posted February 26, 2020 It looks a bit like an oil/fuel level window, but I've never seen one that clips on, perhaps from a lawnmover engine or some such...definately not a jab engine part 3 1
440032 Posted February 26, 2020 Posted February 26, 2020 My question is/are: Is yours the only aircraft in the hangar? Do you have a portable generator or compressor in the hangar - or what other machinery? I sure don't have one on my Jabiru engine. Looks like a part off a thronomister to me. 1
Hunsta Posted February 28, 2020 Posted February 28, 2020 thronomister 4) a thronomister In conjunction with a phase detractor, this is an alternative for the adjustable dingle arm in a . 1
kgwilson Posted February 28, 2020 Posted February 28, 2020 Are you sure it's not the angle of the dangle of the dingle arm that has caused the thronomister to fall off.
myshed2 Posted February 29, 2020 Author Posted February 29, 2020 Thanks everyone for your input. No the aeroplane is not in a hangar with other aerplanes its in my driveway outside my workshop. It could well be a part from something out of the workshop. I have been working on the electrics ie; distributors, coils, spark plug leads etc so wanted to be reassured that it wasnt something from any of them. An instructor of mine told me the story of him getting in a cub one day and finding a washer on the floor. The pilot said, "ah it doesn't look important, ignore it", so they did until at 3,000 feet enroute, the rudder cable disconnected from the pedals. They had a very interesting landing some of which was on an airstrip. Hence my paranoia. 2 1
brinykraut Posted March 2, 2020 Posted March 2, 2020 Thanks everyone for your input. No the aeroplane is not in a hangar with other aerplanes its in my driveway outside my workshop. It could well be a part from something out of the workshop. I have been working on the electrics ie; distributors, coils, spark plug leads etc so wanted to be reassured that it wasnt something from any of them. An instructor of mine told me the story of him getting in a cub one day and finding a washer on the floor. The pilot said, "ah it doesn't look important, ignore it", so they did until at 3,000 feet enroute, the rudder cable disconnected from the pedals. They had a very interesting landing some of which was on an airstrip. Hence my paranoia. I understand the concern! Looks like a good query for Jabiru. Pete Krotje at JabUSA has been very helpful up here in the evil empire. Cheers, G
Old Koreelah Posted March 2, 2020 Posted March 2, 2020 ...An instructor of mine told me the story of him getting in a cub one day and finding a washer on the floor. The pilot said, "ah it doesn't look important, ignore it", so they did until at 3,000 feet enroute, the rudder cable disconnected from the pedals. They had a very interesting landing some of which was on an airstrip. Hence my paranoia. I understand your concerns, myshed2; how old is your aircraft? The only new car I ever bought had a slight bulge under the carpet. After removing seats and the carpet, I found a small plastic frame, presumably discarded when some worker installed a component. Could your strange item have a similar origin?
IBob Posted March 2, 2020 Posted March 2, 2020 OK, there's a story about that: Concerns a carpetlayer working in a council house in the UK, back when carpets were laboriously tacked down, turning on his knees after finishing a room to see a small lump in the carpet. Checking for his tools and finding them all there. Then realising he had his lighter but not his ciggies, cursing himself for a fool, taking a mallet, hammering the lump flat. Whereupon the owner of the house enters saying 'I've brought you a cuppa. And here's your smokes, you left 'em in the kitchen. Haven't seen the budgie, have you?.................' 2 3
waraton Posted April 18, 2020 Posted April 18, 2020 Here is another "whats this" (the cable not the tape!) found in the hangar today and have no clue what it is off.
ClintonB Posted April 18, 2020 Posted April 18, 2020 Good thing is, that it doesn’t look used or broken. But I would always wonder until I found its home.
red750 Posted April 18, 2020 Posted April 18, 2020 Looks to me like a wire saw without the finger rings.
440032 Posted April 18, 2020 Posted April 18, 2020 It sure doesn't look robust enough to be any part of an aircraft.
Thruster88 Posted April 18, 2020 Posted April 18, 2020 A steel lanyard to prevent the loss of a cap or clip on a ground machine. 2
Old Koreelah Posted April 18, 2020 Posted April 18, 2020 It sure doesn't look robust enough to be any part of an aircraft. It doesn't have to very robust to save your plane; I made up something similar and looped it around my carby, then fixed the ends to my firewall. The theory is that if I hit a bird and my prop is damaged, it could become sufficiently unbalanced to rip the engine from its mounts faster than I could shut it down. I've read that Rotax carbs are not clamped to their rubbers so that they are dislodged by wild engine vibrations, automatically cutting off their fuel.
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