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  • REmoving the horizontal stab - rusted in place

    Among other things (chase the wasps out of 88M), I almost completed removing the tailfeather. The horiz. stab. is held in place with two tubes jutting out from the fuse and slipping into the horiz. stab and held in place with bolts.
    The forward set of tubes is loose in the stab., but the aft tubes are a different story. Rusted tight. I soaked them with liquid wrench, set up a vibration and did a variety of other things including taking advantage of the wiggle room in the from tube; placed a wedge there and tried to force the trailing edge forward. No luck.

    Anyone had this problem and can offer a fix? - MIke
    Mike Horowitz
    Falls Church, Va
    BC-12D, N5188M
    TF - 14954

  • #2
    Re: REmoving the horizontal stab - rusted in place

    Are the bolts horizontal or vertical?

    Comment


    • #3
      Re: REmoving the horizontal stab - rusted in place

      Had the same problem with a Champ I restored. The stabs were junk, so I hacksawed them off to save the fuse. I put a wrench on the stab stub and turned it off. Sorry, this is not what you wanted to hear.
      Ray

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      • #4
        Re: REmoving the horizontal stab - rusted in place

        Originally posted by Robert Lees
        Are the bolts horizontal or vertical?
        the're Vertical - Mike
        Mike Horowitz
        Falls Church, Va
        BC-12D, N5188M
        TF - 14954

        Comment


        • #5
          Re: REmoving the horizontal stab - rusted in place

          Mike, I hacksawed mine too... but if the fabric's coming off, why not cut a slit and see if you can get something like a 2x4 across the fuselage, and gently "persuade" the stab to come off. Keep it as close to the rear tube as you can and don't hammer on it very hard, or you'll have to repair the butt rib on the stab as well.
          JH
          I'm so far behind, I think I'm ahead

          Comment


          • #6
            Re: REmoving the horizontal stab - rusted in place

            Mike,

            I had the exact same problem.

            I cut a 6ft long piece of angle iron, and bought two u-bolts that fit around the 7/8" tubing. I placed the angle iron under the stab parallel to and close to the fuselage, and drilled holes for the u-bolts to attach the leading edge tube and the trailing edge tube to the angle iron. This allowed me to use the angle iron as sort of a "wrench" to gently work the leading end of the stab up and down to brake the rusty fit loose in the back tube. I felt if I didn't use the angle iron, I would twist the back tube and break it loose where the ribs weld to it. I had to use it on both stabs, they both were frozen to the rear tube.

            In my case, the tubing was all rusted pretty bad under the fabric, so don't hold your hopes too high that the stabs will merely need re-covering.

            Good luck with the plane.

            John
            John 3728T

            Comment


            • #7
              Re: REmoving the horizontal stab - rusted in place

              Originally posted by JDORAN
              Mike,

              I had the exact same problem.

              I cut a 6ft long piece of angle iron, and bought two u-bolts that fit around the 7/8" tubing. I placed the angle iron under the stab parallel to and close to the fuselage, and drilled holes for the u-bolts to attach the leading edge tube and the trailing edge tube to the angle iron. This allowed me to use the angle iron as sort of a "wrench" to gently work the leading end of the stab up and down to brake the rusty fit loose in the back tube. I felt if I didn't use the angle iron, I would twist the back tube and break it loose where the ribs weld to it. I had to use it on both stabs, they both were frozen to the rear tube.

              In my case, the tubing was all rusted pretty bad under the fabric, so don't hold your hopes too high that the stabs will merely need re-covering.

              Good luck with the plane.

              John

              John - when you do this, arn't the "u" bolts squeezing the stab tubes? - Mike
              Mike Horowitz
              Falls Church, Va
              BC-12D, N5188M
              TF - 14954

              Comment


              • #8
                Re: REmoving the horizontal stab - rusted in place

                Originally posted by N96337
                Mike, I hacksawed mine too... but if the fabric's coming off, why not cut a slit and see if you can get something like a 2x4 across the fuselage, and gently "persuade" the stab to come off. Keep it as close to the rear tube as you can and don't hammer on it very hard, or you'll have to repair the butt rib on the stab as well.
                JH
                With the access plates and elevator off, I was able to take a 1" wooden dowel, enter from the starbord side, and placing the dowel against the elevator hinge pin bearing on the port side and beat the dowel with a rubber mallet, applying force outward. No luck. I'll try again later this week when the Liquid
                Wrench has had time to soak in.Next step will probably be the 'u-bolt-lever-arm-thing' described in another entry. - Mike
                Mike Horowitz
                Falls Church, Va
                BC-12D, N5188M
                TF - 14954

                Comment


                • #9
                  Re: REmoving the horizontal stab - rusted in place

                  Originally posted by JDORAN
                  Mike,

                  I had the exact same problem.

                  I cut a 6ft long piece of angle iron, and bought two u-bolts that fit around the 7/8" tubing. I placed the angle iron under the stab parallel to and close to the fuselage, and drilled holes for the u-bolts to attach the leading edge tube and the trailing edge tube to the angle iron. This allowed me to use the angle iron as sort of a "wrench" to gently work the leading end of the stab up and down to brake the rusty fit loose in the back tube. I felt if I didn't use the angle iron, I would twist the back tube and break it loose where the ribs weld to it. I had to use it on both stabs, they both were frozen to the rear tube.

                  In my case, the tubing was all rusted pretty bad under the fabric, so don't hold your hopes too high that the stabs will merely need re-covering.

                  Good luck with the plane.

                  John

                  John - did you know I'm doing this work in St. Mary's Co.? - Mike
                  Mike Horowitz
                  Falls Church, Va
                  BC-12D, N5188M
                  TF - 14954

                  Comment


                  • #10
                    Re: REmoving the horizontal stab - rusted in place

                    Mike if you throw the liquid wrench away and use PB Blaster you will prbably have better results. Marv
                    Marvin Post TF 519

                    Comment


                    • #11
                      Re: REmoving the horizontal stab - rusted in place

                      Originally posted by Marv
                      Mike if you throw the liquid wrench away and use PB Blaster you will prbably have better results. Marv
                      And when that doesn't work, get some Kroil!

                      Plan B - Nothing busts rust like a torch....
                      John
                      New Yoke hub covers
                      www.skyportservices.net

                      Comment


                      • #12
                        Re: REmoving the horizontal stab - rusted in place

                        Mike,

                        Don't tighten the u-bolts enough to crush the tube, but snug enough to grip it well.

                        The torch comment also has merit, especially since you are stripping off the old fabric. If push came to shove, you could slide some pieces of sheet metal behind where you are heating to protect the vertical stab fabric, and lightly heat it. I don't think it will need too much heat to get it to give.

                        You ought to leave the plane there when you are done, at least it's outside the ADIZ.

                        John
                        John 3728T

                        Comment


                        • #13
                          Re: REmoving the horizontal stab - rusted in place

                          Originally posted by Marv
                          Mike if you throw the liquid wrench away and use PB Blaster you will prbably have better results. Marv

                          Found it at AutoZone; I'll try it out tomorrow - Mike
                          Mike Horowitz
                          Falls Church, Va
                          BC-12D, N5188M
                          TF - 14954

                          Comment


                          • #14
                            Re: REmoving the horizontal stab - rusted in place

                            Originally posted by JDORAN
                            Mike,

                            I had the exact same problem.

                            I cut a 6ft long piece of angle iron, and bought two u-bolts that fit around the 7/8" tubing. I placed the angle iron under the stab parallel to and close to the fuselage, and drilled holes for the u-bolts to attach the leading edge tube and the trailing edge tube to the angle iron. This allowed me to use the angle iron as sort of a "wrench" to gently work the leading end of the stab up and down to brake the rusty fit loose in the back tube. I felt if I didn't use the angle iron, I would twist the back tube and break it loose where the ribs weld to it. I had to use it on both stabs, they both were frozen to the rear tube.
                            John
                            This is what you get when you don't read the instructions carefully.
                            When I got back and re-read what you wrote, I discovered I'd been spending the complete day doing the wrong thing. . Well, I'll go back Sunday and try again. - Mike
                            Attached Files
                            Mike Horowitz
                            Falls Church, Va
                            BC-12D, N5188M
                            TF - 14954

                            Comment


                            • #15
                              Re: REmoving the horizontal stab - rusted in place

                              Mike, you're not gonna try to pry that stabilizer off with the brace wire connected, are you ? It will be easier of it is not connected

                              Two large wedges, placed between the stabilizer and the upper longeron right next to the attach bolts, will probably remove the stabilizer. Tap the wedges with a hammer in small increments, plenty of penetrating oil, and you should have it loose in a jiffy. The long pry bar can bend the stub tubes if you try too hard or too much on one side before reversing the bar. IMHO there is less risk of bending those tubes by using the wedges. I would put thin metal on the stabilizer root edge and the fuselage longerons, and let the wedges slip between the metal so you don't even mar the fabric.
                              Taylorcraft : Making Better Aviators for 75 Years... and Counting

                              Bill Berle
                              TF#693

                              http://www.ezflaphandle.com
                              http://www.grantstar.net
                              N26451 (1940 BL(C)-65) 1988-90
                              N47DN (Auster Autocrat) 1992-93
                              N96121 (1946 BC-12D-85) 1998-99
                              N29544 (1940 BL(C)-85) 2005-08

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