Originally posted by Mpbethke
View Post
Announcement
Collapse
No announcement yet.
Looking for wingtip skins
Collapse
X
-
Originally posted by 3Dreaming View PostScott, All of the stamped rib wings I have seen had a L and R flange rib stacked together to make a very strong box rib at the wing root. If I need I can shoot a picture tomorrow.
Scott
CF-CLR Blog: http://c-fclr.blogspot.ca/
Comment
-
Originally posted by Mpbethke View PostRight on Scott. I looks like you cut up a spare rib to use as the splice? We will most likely repair what we cannot replace. That number 10 rib was quite corroded and so I don't think we wanna try to salvage it. So looking at what I've got, do you have some spare parts to sell?
Thanks,
Matt
Having said that I honestly don't see any reason not to reuse what you have with appropriate repairs if you can't find better.
The corroded one probably looks worse than it is. The worst of mine were not that bad but here's what I would do; Media blast using aluminium oxide 080 media (keep the nozzle a good distance from the surface to ensure against deformation). The corrosion will clean off easily, then simply spot check the material thickness. If you have more than 020 or so I think you're fine if not you can always add a local doubler. Etch, alodine and prime the parts and you'll have a very acceptable set of ribs for your wings.
It is a hell of a lot of work no matter what!!
Scott
CF-CLR Blog: http://c-fclr.blogspot.ca/
Comment
-
Scott
CF-CLR Blog: http://c-fclr.blogspot.ca/
Comment
-
Thanks everyone for the advice. Scott nice work on restoring those ribs. Looks great. I will follow your advice with 0.25 aluminum for patching up some simpler repairs. I'm going to order a few ribs from D&E to move this project along because it looks like an immense amount of time can be sunk into sheet metal repairs. The problem I'm still up against is the wingtip skins. Does anyone have suggestions on fabricating them up or have some to sell?
Thanks,
-Matt
Comment
-
Originally posted by Mpbethke View PostThe problem I'm still up against is the wingtip skins. Does anyone have suggestions on fabricating them up or have some to sell?
Thanks,
-MattScott
CF-CLR Blog: http://c-fclr.blogspot.ca/
Comment
-
Originally posted by Hank Jarrett View PostDid you ever post photos of your damaged "wing tip skins". They are different for different wings. Need to know which type you need.
Hank
Comment
-
Originally posted by Robert Lees View PostEminently repairable. Mine were no worse than those.To my knowledge, these are made of weldable aluminium (the L/E seams are spot welded).
I'd suggest you take them to a classic car repair shop; they'll fix the cracks and get them to shape in very short order.
Rob
Ya'll are very quick to respond and an awesome group.
-Matt
Comment
-
I went ahead and ordered ribs and aileron cove from Scott Ruffner from D&E in FL. He makes stamped aluminum ribs for Taylorcrafts...however the spar channel is set up for a metal spar. All you have to do is cut out the channel to accommodate the thicker spar and re-bend the flange. This falls under "owner-supplied" parts jurisdiction for certified repairs.
Comment
-
Yes, those are actually not bad at all. Welding aluminum is NOT the same as welding steel and this is fairly soft stuff so make sure teh person you use has experience with aluminum. The guy I use for all my welding once butt welded two soda cans together! THAT is skill! You will also need to develop some metal bumping skills to smooth the aluminum out or find a custom car shop. A shop will probably have a small English wheel to smooth things out (a tool I DO NOT have yet so I go old school and hand bump and slap). There are many really good videos on aluminum metal bumping. It is NOT hard and does not require a lot of skill (if it did I couldn't do it). It DOES require PATIENCE. You have to not hammer it into shape, but slowly "encourage it" to go where you want it. It is really rewarding when it starts to work. I think of the aluminum as "clay" and I am just gently moving it to get thicker where it is stretched and stretch it where it is too thick. First step is to get ALL the Bondo off. You can then tap it straight like you want it and get the bulges and dents out (SLOWLY! If you hit it once and it moves, you are hitting too hard!). You want HUNDREDS of taps, not a few blows! This is the instrument panel I tapped out from a flat sheet. It is also the first time I ever did any metal bumping. It is fun and rewarding, but time consuming.
Comment
-
Can you post some photos of your tips? I think you may be referring to the leading edge tips, not the tube wing tips. If so, they are probably the BEST part to start learning metal bumping. The aluminum is pretty much dead soft and easy to work with. If it has hardened up you can anneal it pretty easy. If the photos do look like they are beyond help I should have some here (Va Beach, VA). There were a few different types of LE tips (and tip tubes) so we need to see what you have to see if we have serviceable ones.
Hank
Comment
Comment