John, I hope what I'm about to write is taken in the spirit of encouragement that I intend....The key to not damaging gear legs on an Eagle is to know how to land the plane. The lightly-built Eagles are intolerant of poor airmanship, but will reward the competent pilot with a long, uneventful service life. Assure your skills are at the point where you can land a plane and not merely arrive (semi-crash) and you won't have problems with the gear as designed.
Quote from: Sam Buchanan on January 30, 2014, 06:19:38 AMJohn, I hope what I'm about to write is taken in the spirit of encouragement that I intend....The key to not damaging gear legs on an Eagle is to know how to land the plane. The lightly-built Eagles are intolerant of poor airmanship, but will reward the competent pilot with a long, uneventful service life. Assure your skills are at the point where you can land a plane and not merely arrive (semi-crash) and you won't have problems with the gear as designed.If you fly the plane over-gross, and many do, the gear will need to be beefed up, sooner or later...
I consider the Black Max tires with solid struts to have equivalent shock absorption to the sprung struts with cycle tires. The low pressure tires absorb a lot of energy. I run a max of 10 psi in the Carlisle tires, and flew an entire summer with nearly no pressure. The sidewalls were stiff enough to support the plane but it did wear the outside edges of the tread.