Apart from the trivial $a^6+0^6+0^6=(a^3)^2$, primitive solutions seem difficult to find.
That’s primitive as in not of the form $(kx_1,kx_2,kx_3,k^3z)$ where $(x_1,x_2,x_3,z)$ is a smaller solution.
As far as I can see, either one or two of $(x_1,x_2,x_3)\equiv 0{\pmod 7}$
IMHO, the two cases are very different.
This question concerns the case where exactly one $(x_i)\equiv 0{\pmod 7}$.
My primitive solutions
$$(42,100,81,1134865)$$ $$(168,90,85,4836493)$$ $$(350,324,207,55441585)$$ $$(140,390,213,60163597)$$ $$(378,369,278,76831633)$$ $$(924,1230,715,2053967149)$$
I’ve tried fitting my numerical solutions into known parametric solutions to $a^2+b^2+c^2=d^2$, but without gaining insight. For examples of parametric solutions to $a^2+b^2+c^2=d^2$, see https://sites.google.com/site/tpiezas/004
I know the sixth power residuals ${\pmod 7}$, ${\pmod 8}$ and ${\pmod 9}$ are $0$ or $1$ and that $z\equiv 3{\pmod 7}$ or $z\equiv 4{\pmod 7}$
My Question
Can anybody please do any of the following:
Fit my solutions into the known parametric solutions to $a^2+b^2+c^2=d^2$?
Find a parametric solutions that gives new primitive solutions?
Point me in the direction of any previous work on $x_1^6+x_2^6+x_3^6=z^2$ ?
Find any more primitive solutions?
Update 28th April 2018
The answer from @Sam provides these results, plus others too large for me to easily check. However, it certainly does not provide all the small solutions, so I’m sure there are more to find.
$$(2184,2518,2043,20883327517)$$ $$(3087,4482,3404,102604114673)$$ $$(5306,10617,4728,1210664898377)$$ $$(29316,13469,5802,25313949479269)$$ $$(79758,87036,36221,833297083257349)$$ $$(502026,462741,29408,160707356499029581)$$
