I used a method I found worked better for me than the spacers from Sonex. I used "bare" wheels mounted on the axles with a 12' straight edge to "project" toe-in about 20' in front of the plane; measured off the centerline, also extended way out in front of the plane.
Larry,
I too am looking for alternate methods of setting my toe-in, as the use of Tracey O'Brien axles does not permit using the factory spacers to set the angle due to the interference of the TOB anti-rotation flange with a straight edge. If I understand the method you describe correctly, and using my XenosB dimensions with a wheel track of
64.5 inches, the plans call for a toe-in angle of 0.7 degrees. Setting up a right triangle using half the wheel track (
34.25 inches) for the base leg, a 20' 'convergence distance' (240 inches) along the height, the toe-in angle is given by the inverse tangent of
34.25/240, or
8.1 degrees.
The 'convergence distance' needs to be a bit farther in front of the plane to match the 0.7 degree toe-in. Projecting the distance from the wheel to the airframe centerline in front of the plane using a base leg of half the wheel track of
34.25 inches, while setting a 0.7 degree toe-in, the intercept distance along the height, call it x, (out in front of the plane), is given by tan 0.7 =
34.25/x, 1/(
34.25 * tan 0.7) = x, x =
2,640 inches or
220 feet.
This calculator
http://www.carbidedepot.com/formulas-trigright.asp is helpful for checking the trig.
**Update: Half the wheel track should be, for my XenosB, 34.25 inches. Corrections to original post in blue.