Found Spike Ball replacement set 2 for $5 at Wal-Mart perfect to keep birds out of wing at aileron pushrod.
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Keeping the Birds out.
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Good idea.
I had an experience with (I think) raccoon occupation in my US BC12D this month May 2024. They appeared to have got in through the lack of bungee covers. They chewed almost nothing inside the cockpit. No damage to any structure, wiring, fabric, bungees, or anything. Footprints all over. Perhaps nesting to raise young. This is my first experience of any animal/bird infiltration since I got the aircraft in 2015.
But they decided to use the gap between the rudder pedals and the firewall as a dumping ground.
It was the whole width of the fuselage!
Many hours of cleaning later, floorboard removal etc, many rubber gloves and towels and heaving at the smell, and liberal use of disinfectant, I was able to take a fresh-smelling Taylorcraft to the Black Hills SD and to Minot & other lovely places.
In Deadwood, South Dakota, we found a cake shop with some apparently "nice" cakes. We declined.
Upon my return, I hastily fitted the bungee covers I'd been lazy not installing earlier!
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Rob Lees your description of the awful stench on the floorboards makes me want to ask why you're sure these were Raccoons? Known as generally clean animals by nature they lack what other possess- namely anal scent glands in particular ones that secrete foul-smelling fluid directly into the poop as a deterrent to attackers.
This trait is however found in the American Opossum, our only marsupial- and I know of this because after one decided to relieve himself inside my clothes dryer I haven't been able to dry clothes in it since.
To my knowledge only the two or three species of Skunk here can top this. Could you have had an invasion by Opossum instead? After all they didn't survive living with dinosaurs by dumb luck.Bill Fife
BL12-65 '41 Deluxe Under (s-l-o-w) Restoration
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