Brett wrote:I was just wondering if anyone else has, or is experiencing this issue?
In the 10 hours I've flown now I need again to try and do something with the mounts. The prop hub has drooped down now that it is again rubbing on the cowling. The lower rear engine mount and top front squash quite a fair amount and essentially tilt the engine forward. I had a spare set of mounts and fitted these at about 2 or 3 hours and now they need attention again.
I forgot to email Sonex during the week and have just remembered now I'm at the airfield doing the 10 hour service.
I thought perhaps maybe I had some defective rubbers the first time but 2 sets sagging so quickly seems strange.
Does anyone have some thoughts on this or perhaps tried using Nolethane bushes? I'm not sure if they would be too stiff or perhaps may not handle the heat.
-Brett
This is a recurring problem with the geometry of the engine mount and the softness of the rubber engine mounts (my opinion). If you don't fix it now this is what will likely happen:
https://www.flickr.com/gp/127253485@N06/4L0Dm1If you look at the accessory plate photos you'll see where the lower engine bolts have eaten into the tops of the bottom two holes in the accessory plate. The problem appears to be that because the top and bottom arms of the engine mount are not connected, the top arms act as a fulcrum and allow the downward movement of the engine (gravity and g-loads) to flex the upper arms. The soft rubber mounts on the lower arms can't resist the movement and so the lower rubber mounts get elongated until the bolts make contact with the accessory plate holes.
You can try using oversized washers (larger diameter than the rubber mounts) so you can crank down the pressure on the nuts/bolts (there is no published torque value from Sonex) and catch the overflowing rubber. If you do, you will probably have to use shorter engine bolts or the nuts will bottom out on the bolt shoulders before you can get them tight enough. This is most easily done by removing the engine from the accessory plate (you can just leave it hanging there in space a few inches away), so you can work with just the accessory plate. I have done it both ways and I can tell you it is MUCH easier to do with the engine not on the accessory plate.
But I did all that and still could not keep the engine from sagging. I had to replace my accessory plate, then make new mounts out of polyurethane. Another Sonex owner made molds and then we tested different ratios of the 2-part polyurethane until we got something that was harder than the rubber mounts. So far NO SAG! You can see one of those mounts on the Flickr page link above.