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Some wing progress

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  • #31
    Re: Some wing progress

    Plan on $2-15K for raw material to build the ribs, minimum quantities apply. Plus the time to build and the time to make fixtures that meet your idea of FAA requirements..... The roll formed J tubing to make the metal doors was going to cost me $8k minimum. I had to buy 1500' per order before they would even tool up to make it and I had to pay the tool up fee on top of the material. If your wings are covered, who is ever going to see the rib material?

    Originally posted by Bigdog View Post
    I agree with Hank, it needs to legal. Conceptually it shouldn't be that hard. Dakota Cub must have already proven their extrusion is as good as the Cub T-stock. Someone would have to get it blessed that it's as good or better than the Taylorcraft T-stock. Then you get it blessed as a replacement. It would probably take a DER like Terry and, of course, some $$$.

    I've got a worse problem with my YO-57 which has metal wings. The truss ribs are similar to the SBS but the attachment at the metal spar is totally different. I don't want to go down the extrusion route because I want to maintain the authenticity. I don't really want to modify SBS ribs either, which is approved but again not authentic. I also want to minimize splice repairs. I really want new T-stock so I can remanufacture the ribs like new. It doesn't appear hard to find someone who can roll-form the "T", even in small quantities. My problem has been finding the .012 aluminum. So far I have not found any thinner than .016 thru normal sources. I'm not plugged into specialty sources. I think it takes about a 1"x.012" strip to form the "T", probably 2024 or 6062. I'll have to check the drawing. If anyone knows a source for the aluminum, I'll pursue getting some formed to the L-2 drawing.
    N29787
    '41 BC12-65

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    • #32
      Re: Some wing progress

      Tim, I am not saying you are wrong. I agree with your (OUR) interpretation of the regs, but that doesn't mean someone from the FAA can't (and WON'T) disagree. It doesn't matter if we are right and the guy tagging your plane as down is wrong. It only matters what HE thinks.

      Remember the guy at AirVenture who had one of the new (at that time) swept tip props on his plane. An FAA inspector walking the line saw it and in total ignorance put a tag on the plane saying it could not be flown! He later said he thought the swept tips were the result of a prop strike!!!! The FAA guy then LEFT the airshow and the owner of the plane was stuck there. The reps from the manufacturer of the props were still there as were many FAA heavies, but NONE were willing to listen to the manufacturer or owner and remove the grounding of the plane. NO ONE was willing to take responsibility for the guy who had NO IDEA what he was doing! They finally tracked him down and HE had to remove it.

      I was AT AirVenture when this happened (as I remember....lots of risk there) and I am pretty sure the company was one of the members of the NASA GA Consortium. It was a MESS because MANY don't seem to understand it the way you are saying it and WE understand it. They don't know enough about our planes to understand what is and isn't safe, so they default to what was done by the factory when the plane was built. All I am saying is if you are going to build new ribs, make them the same as the factory. It shouldn't cost any more to make them just like the drawing than to redesign them, and if they are identical to the originals there would be no way for anyone inspecting to even know if they were new parts or old. As for the rivets, I would bet very few have ever SEEN the original rivets, but if I could get them, personally I would use them instead of the new ones.

      I just don't like inviting trouble, and I see the regulation bureaucrats being able to make a real mess of our planes if they go all Draconian on us. Just remember what happened when a past factory owner convinced a bunch of bureaucrats that there was a problem with our struts. The truth counted for NOTHING. The bureaucrats will make the decision that results in the least perceived risk to THEM.

      Hank

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      • #33
        Re: Some wing progress

        Its easy, have the FAA prove you are wrong, the air venture thing would have had the red tag removed and a log book entry stating that the propeller was airworthy and I would have flown it out....
        N29787
        '41 BC12-65

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        • #34
          Re: Some wing progress

          The problem was that the FAA senior Execs would not ALLOW the red tag to be removed. None of them would take the responsibility for over-riding the guy who put it there and he couldn't be found. It was a perfect example of administrative executives with NO experience in real maintenance or engineering holding those who actually knew what they were talking about hostage.

          Most Federal Government posts are now filled with people with degrees in management or government and not degrees or experience with the subjects of their organizations. I see it ALL THE TIME working with the FAA. When I worked with AGATE we worked with the Small Aircraft Certification Directorate and the FAA Tech Center in NJ. Both were staffed with some of the best people around. The SACD in Kansas City was filled with small GA aircraft lovers who actually FLEW GA aircraft and LOVED airplanes. The Tech Center was slightly less GA oriented, but still aviation crazy people who mostly LOVED aviation (at least at the levels we worked with.....we stayed away from "Mahogany Row" where the Senior Executive Service folks camped out).

          The real problem with almost ANY Government organization is with senior leadership who have NO IDEA about the details of their organization. That describes senior management at NASA to a "T" and the FAA has hired an ARMY of people who are managers with no knowledge of aviation. The last meeting I had with the FAA on a contract there were only two people in the room who had ever flown an airplane. My partner and I! There were also two guys who were ex Boeing engineers who really knew their stuff but were not pilots. The guys from the FAA didn't know squat about the technical side of the world. The only experience with flying they had was from the back of an airliner.

          Management PhD's are taking the world over.

          Hank

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          • #35
            Re: Some wing progress

            Flying without cocktail service and flush toilets is barbaric.
            Best Regards,
            Mark Julicher

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