R
EVISION
:
-
D
ATE
:
12/29/04
P
AGE
:
10
Copyright
2004 Glasair Aviation, LLC Arlington, Washington All rights reserved
The Sportsman must be jacked up and supported on jack stands for
periodic main landing gear maintenance and for annual inspections.
You have several options for jacking the Sportsman. If you have a
hangar with a sturdy roof structure, you can simply hoist the airplane
by the lifting eyes welded to the fuselage cage. If you have access to a
pair of tall, Cessna-type airplane jacks, position them under the
outboard wing strut mounting bolts that are visible near where the
struts protrude from the wings. If these options aren’t available, you
can use a short bottle jack or scissors jack to lift the airplane by the
main landing gear struts just inboard of the wheels; to use such a jack,
you will need to devise some sort of adapter that either clamps to the
strut or mounts on the jack to keep the strut from slipping off. A final
alternative, is to have several helpers lift the airplane by one wing near
the tip while you position a jack stand under the main gear strut. (The
jack stand could consist of a simple 8–9" long 4
×
4 wooden block
with the ends cut off square and a semi-circular notch cut in one end to
cradle the axle.) Whatever method you use, it’s necessary to lift the
airplane only just enough for the tires to clear the floor by about 1".
To work on the tailwheel, simply support the tail of the airplane with a
sturdy, padded sawhorse under the aft fuselage.