R
Roger, Roger
Guest
...on a Cherokee 140. Ugly. I just hope it wasn't one of OUR line guys that did it.
The only bad thing about the PA28 is a lot of the ones I towed didn't have the limits marked, sort of like the Mooneys. I hated towing those things around. Cirruses were my friend.Somebody must not have been paying any attention to what was going on behind the tug. I don't recall the tow limits being that tight on a PA28. Or any Cessna/Piper for that matter. Bonanza or Mooney was a lot tighter on the limits.
The only bad thing about the PA28 is a lot of the ones I towed didn't have the limits marked, sort of like the Mooneys. I hated towing those things around. Cirruses were my friend.
I hated towing Bonanza's. More often that not, the market limits weren't the limits, and you'd break the little pin before you hit the limit.
The worst thing about those pins is that the pins themselves were really cheap, but the price of labor made breaking them a big deal.
I think it is a matter of the kind of method one is using. The safest way of course is hand towing. Now of course this is not practical with a large aircraft or for going long distances.
The next best option would be the power tug that lifts the nose wheel onto a free-turning plate, allowing the tug to turn without turning the nose wheel.
Even still the tug may side-load the mains on extreme turns (on main rolling forward, on main rolling back).
Are these types of tugs used on biz. jets?
I think it is a matter of the kind of method one is using. The safest way of course is hand towing. Now of course this is not practical with a large aircraft or for going long distances.
The next best option would be the power tug that lifts the nose wheel onto a free-turning plate, allowing the tug to turn without turning the nose wheel.
Even still the tug may side-load the mains on extreme turns (on main rolling forward, on main rolling back).
Are these types of tugs used on biz. jets?
I know those tugs that pick up the nose wheel are popular, but I'm not to sure about them. Seems like it would be real easy to drop the nose wheel off of the plate, if you aren't paying attention. No way you can use one of those tugs on a jet. They are just to big, its easier to put the towbar on the jet, and do it that way. I even had a Westwind pilot explicitly tell us not to use one of those lift tugs on his plane, because he had in the last 12 months had 3 incidents with his nose gear and those tugs causing damage.
I've never seen one that allows the nose wheel to free-caster while the tug spins around it, but I have a hard time imagining one built that way. Those type of tugs have to secure the aircraft to it somehow to prevent it from rolling away and I can't even imagine a good way to do that without capturing the nose wheel.
However, those tugs definitely can move biz jets, I worked for an FBO with a medium sized Lektro that was capable of moving a GIV just fine. They may not look like much, but they've got some torque.
I do still prefer a tug and bar method because it's still relatively easy to get out of tow limits quickly due to the steering arrangement while a standard bar and tug arrangement tends to give you a bit more reaction time. Really, I've never had a problem with either arrangement, and they both beat the hell out of hand towing any day. A busy FBO just doesn't have the time or resources to play with pushing aircraft by hand. The only things that have ever taken away my confidence are bad brakes, loose steering, and transmissions that can't be locked into one gear.
Please don't use the lift plate tugs on Learjets. It doesn't take kindly to the straps around the strut. It has quite a puny ass nose gear assembly. Thanks