Get ready for a long post.
The fabric on the wings of my L-2B was getting to look pretty bad, fading, cracking, ringworm etc. so I decided it was time for a recover. When I removed the old fabric I discovered, to my chagrin, some serious issues with the wood. Although the airplane has been hangared for the 20+ years that I have owned it, and was told that it had been hangared by the previous owner, it looks like moisture took its toll on the wood and the glue. Gravity lets any moisture in the wings collect at the trailing edge and that's where most of the damage was, especially at the inboard section of the aileron bay. and all along the aileron bay itself. This is an area behind the rear spar where there are no inspection covers and along with the area forward of the front spar don't get inspected during the annual inspection. It appeared to me that when the last recover job was done, a lot of sins were covered up. My speculation. A big warning to L-2 inspectors is to look for scalloping along the trailing edge of the wing. These wings had the wood trailing edge inboard of the aileron replace with metal and were straight as an arrow.
Time for a major rebuild.
I do not have the skills, tools (I don't even have a table saw or a chop saw), or enough time left in my life ( I'm 76) to undertake this project. I have scoured the state of Alaska for anyone capable of doing this kind of work. I found only two who I believe have the ability to do the job and neither have enough time left in their lives either to undertake my project and do all the other stuff that they plan on doing. I built a 17ft crate and packed up the wings and shipped them to my friend Tim Boughner of Tim's Aircraft in Port Orchard, Washington. Tim has the experience since he has rebuilt Stearman wings and L-5 wings. Being a one man shop, he is very busy and really doesn't have the time for my project but he said that if I came down and help him he would try to do the job when he could spare some time for it. I guess now he doesn't have a choice since my wings are cluttering up his shop. I know that a lot of people start down the road to wood wing restoration by making the ribs. Taylorcraft ribs are easy to make as they are all basically the same and there are a lot of them. Just make up a breadboard and pop out a batch every day and eventually you have a bunch of ribs that all look alike. Now comes the hard, time consuming part. Installing and gluing ribs is a time consuming and tedious job. Sanding of parts is not allowed and resorcinol glue is the only approved glue and can be difficult to work with. The real challenge is making the formed plywood leading and trailing edges.
I asked Tim if we could use metal instead wood for everything except for the spars like the B series Taylorcraft, after all, they have the same airfoil. I bought a BC12 wing from a bone yard to compare the two. They are identical to the L2 with the exception that the L-2 has a thicker front spar, one size larger tube on the compression struts and one size larger drag wires. B series ribs would have to be modified to fit the thicker front spar but other than that everything is the same.
Tim is a master at getting field approvals. He has a very good relationship with his PMI and presents things to the FAA in a way that they can understand it and approve the project. I asked him what he thought about getting a field approval for my idea and he said that it was very possible. We made a mock up section of the L-2 spars and put a modified B series rib on it with a D series wood rib next to it and made a presentation to the FAA. Yesterday the FAA gave us the go ahead with the mod. They are calling it basically a material substitution.
This L-2 is a survivor. It has never been a hangar queen or a back of the hangar restoration project. The cost of shop labor to make new wings in today's environment would be prohibitive and exceed it's value. It deserves to live on and bring the pure joy of flying to more generations for the next 76 years. There is nothing on earth greater than having a throttle in you left hand, a stick in your right hand, and watching the golden sun reflecting on the back of a wooden propeller.
Bob Picard
The fabric on the wings of my L-2B was getting to look pretty bad, fading, cracking, ringworm etc. so I decided it was time for a recover. When I removed the old fabric I discovered, to my chagrin, some serious issues with the wood. Although the airplane has been hangared for the 20+ years that I have owned it, and was told that it had been hangared by the previous owner, it looks like moisture took its toll on the wood and the glue. Gravity lets any moisture in the wings collect at the trailing edge and that's where most of the damage was, especially at the inboard section of the aileron bay. and all along the aileron bay itself. This is an area behind the rear spar where there are no inspection covers and along with the area forward of the front spar don't get inspected during the annual inspection. It appeared to me that when the last recover job was done, a lot of sins were covered up. My speculation. A big warning to L-2 inspectors is to look for scalloping along the trailing edge of the wing. These wings had the wood trailing edge inboard of the aileron replace with metal and were straight as an arrow.
Time for a major rebuild.
I do not have the skills, tools (I don't even have a table saw or a chop saw), or enough time left in my life ( I'm 76) to undertake this project. I have scoured the state of Alaska for anyone capable of doing this kind of work. I found only two who I believe have the ability to do the job and neither have enough time left in their lives either to undertake my project and do all the other stuff that they plan on doing. I built a 17ft crate and packed up the wings and shipped them to my friend Tim Boughner of Tim's Aircraft in Port Orchard, Washington. Tim has the experience since he has rebuilt Stearman wings and L-5 wings. Being a one man shop, he is very busy and really doesn't have the time for my project but he said that if I came down and help him he would try to do the job when he could spare some time for it. I guess now he doesn't have a choice since my wings are cluttering up his shop. I know that a lot of people start down the road to wood wing restoration by making the ribs. Taylorcraft ribs are easy to make as they are all basically the same and there are a lot of them. Just make up a breadboard and pop out a batch every day and eventually you have a bunch of ribs that all look alike. Now comes the hard, time consuming part. Installing and gluing ribs is a time consuming and tedious job. Sanding of parts is not allowed and resorcinol glue is the only approved glue and can be difficult to work with. The real challenge is making the formed plywood leading and trailing edges.
I asked Tim if we could use metal instead wood for everything except for the spars like the B series Taylorcraft, after all, they have the same airfoil. I bought a BC12 wing from a bone yard to compare the two. They are identical to the L2 with the exception that the L-2 has a thicker front spar, one size larger tube on the compression struts and one size larger drag wires. B series ribs would have to be modified to fit the thicker front spar but other than that everything is the same.
Tim is a master at getting field approvals. He has a very good relationship with his PMI and presents things to the FAA in a way that they can understand it and approve the project. I asked him what he thought about getting a field approval for my idea and he said that it was very possible. We made a mock up section of the L-2 spars and put a modified B series rib on it with a D series wood rib next to it and made a presentation to the FAA. Yesterday the FAA gave us the go ahead with the mod. They are calling it basically a material substitution.
This L-2 is a survivor. It has never been a hangar queen or a back of the hangar restoration project. The cost of shop labor to make new wings in today's environment would be prohibitive and exceed it's value. It deserves to live on and bring the pure joy of flying to more generations for the next 76 years. There is nothing on earth greater than having a throttle in you left hand, a stick in your right hand, and watching the golden sun reflecting on the back of a wooden propeller.
Bob Picard
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