I have posted before about how I have not had great luck with wooden gear leg dampers on our RV-3, and replaced them with metal with better (but not perfect) results. My dislike of the wood/fiberglass method is because it is messy and somewhat permanent…and you really don’t know what you have until you have made it permanent and gotten all messy! The purpose of the stiffener/damper (no matter how you make it) is to damp the motion of the gear legs fore-and-aft to stop shimmy (while leaving the up and down flex relatively unchanged). I stole the work of others using an aluminum bar clamped to the gear leg on the aft side, and this appears to work about as well as the wood - and if you don’t get it right, you can remove it and change stuff much more easily than the glassed-on wood!
I decided to follow the same idea with the F1 project, and this week fabricated and installed some pretty substantial stiffeners to these extra-long spaghetti legs. The bar stock is 1/4” thick and 1-1/2” wide. The clamps are aluminum - all material sourced from McMaster except for the AN4 bolts/washers/nuts. The gear leg fairings cover all this up very nicely - use the shortest bolts that will work to make sure they don’t bump against the fiberglass. I had to add a .020 shim strip under each clamp to get them tight on the leg - McMaster only had 41 mm clamps, and I needed 40 mm…..
If you;re in to this kind of experimentation, this picture should be enough to kick off your thought process. The cheap black tie-wrap holding the brake line are temporary of course - they’ll be nice Grip-Locks when finished……

I decided to follow the same idea with the F1 project, and this week fabricated and installed some pretty substantial stiffeners to these extra-long spaghetti legs. The bar stock is 1/4” thick and 1-1/2” wide. The clamps are aluminum - all material sourced from McMaster except for the AN4 bolts/washers/nuts. The gear leg fairings cover all this up very nicely - use the shortest bolts that will work to make sure they don’t bump against the fiberglass. I had to add a .020 shim strip under each clamp to get them tight on the leg - McMaster only had 41 mm clamps, and I needed 40 mm…..
If you;re in to this kind of experimentation, this picture should be enough to kick off your thought process. The cheap black tie-wrap holding the brake line are temporary of course - they’ll be nice Grip-Locks when finished……


