Originally posted by Scott
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aileron spars
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Last edited by Jim Herpst; 03-29-2023, 08:37.
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Originally posted by Hank Jarrett View PostI am pretty sure it was Doug Fir is 26% heavier than Stitca Spruce and 23% stronger. (DON'T go on my memory!!!) I AM sure it was stronger AND heavier and if you use wood that meets the selection criterion new Fir will be stronger in the same dimensions than Spruce. I was mainly curious how much heavier a part like a spar was since they use a 12" x 12" x 1" piece of wood for the calculations, and VERY few parts have those dimensions. ;-)N29787
'41 BC12-65
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My spars were failing. The wood is all good, but the glue is letting go. They used hyde glue on the splices from the factory. Mine were signed by the guys that built them.....Ken knew both of them from working there in '46.....and were dated June 12, 1946 if I remember right. Not all the joints were failing, and the doublers were still fairly good, but it was pretty much the ribs that was holding my spars together.
JohnI'm so far behind, I think I'm ahead
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Resorsinal will not be the glue failing as described above . Hyde glue one could see. Actually I restored an L2 several years back. I did completely rebuild the wings but was surprised to see how well the hyde glue was holding up. Also that plane had been a military bird and had been outside tons
The laminated spars used resorsinal glue as I recall Forrest or Bruce Bixler stating in an old Taylorcraft news letter. I will go find it.Last edited by Jim Herpst; 03-30-2023, 15:25.
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Originally posted by taylorukuk View PostThanks all
Your thoughts represent mine - There is no rot in the spars they just looked aged which is why we replaced the wing spars with new.
The aileron spars we had were absolutely gone....
I think there are maybe 1 bolt hole that needs positioning to the lesser stressed areas.
I will post what we manage to do for future info.
BR Ian
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Another way of looking at the wood parts of a restoration, is value. What's important in terms of the finished aircraft.... longivity, piece of mind, resale value and potential, return on investment?
Even before I looked at my spars in any detail, I had made the decision to replace them. In the whole scheme of a full restoration, the spars are a relatively straightforward element (notwithstanding material supply problems).
Like it or not, wood structure in aircraft is not perceived by most people as an attribute. Published info on aging aircraft does not distiguish between type of glue, just that glue joints are an issue. With current covering processes, a fabric airframe can have a 30 year or more life expectancy. How are the glue joints going to be when there 110 years old?
The statement "New spars" is therefore important and has, I believe, a similar effect on value and piece of mind as say "sealed struts," especially if the alternative is 80 year-old pieced together originals.
I have four salvageable one piece spars (one has a repair) and two forward and one aft untouched sitka blanks. I have them because shipping is a problem, even within North America. They're available for reasonable cost to anyone who can arrange pickup (they are in the US or Canada).
Scott
CF-CLR Blog: http://c-fclr.blogspot.ca/
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Originally posted by Jim Herpst View PostAlso full disclosure. I have not yet started on my wings. Fuslage getting closer to being able to be put aside so I can begin those. The spars will be scrutinized for ANY defects!
Much appreciated. Thank you
Last edited by Jim Herpst; 03-31-2023, 11:57.
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