8th August 2011

More FWF, and flying again

Trimmed the excess from the aft end of the inlet duct, then chipped away the foam and the micro that held it in.  Sanded the inside down, and test-fit it back to the plane to see how it turned out — quite well, actually; the duct lines right up with the airbox.  Eventually, I’ll trim 1/2″ or so off the front of the airbox and attach airseal fabric.  Laid up one ply of 3″ glass tape around the duct on the inside of the cowl to add strength and thickness.  Once that cures, I’ll sand down the excess fabric sticking out the front and shape the nose of the inlet.

While I had the bottom cowl on, fit the top cowl to check fit of the airseal fabric; looking good so far.  I curved it over and added some paperclips to try and train the fabric to bend in the correct direction.  Tied up the engine heater wires behind the sump, torqued the baffle screw behind the dipstick tube, then installed & safetied the dipstick tube.  Plugged in the engine heater and verified it was still functional.

 

Finally made it to the airport yesterday to go flying with my CFI and get current again.  It came back better than I expected, and he was satisfied enough to sign off on my flight review, which was due at the end of the month.  That stamp says I’m basically safe…now the task is to fly enough to get proficient and fly accurately, then I’ll set up some transition training with one of the CFI’s who does RV-specific training, in preparation for getting this thing off the ground someday.

Milestone: crossed 1500 hours logged on the project tonight.

Hours: 1.9 | Posted in Cowling & Baffles, Engine | Comments Off

6th August 2011

Fiberglass & baffles

A very fiberglassy day, once again.  Also did a bunch of (more) reading on what primers and other coatings are required/recommended for finishing the glass parts.  I’ve identified the list that I would need if I were doing prep for parts that would be painted now/soon (PPG DPLF, followed by K36 or K38) — the part I need to sort out still is whether that is an acceptable stopping place for a plane that likely will not be painted for several years, or if some other coating/sealer/etc needs to be put on top.  I found that the K36 can be mixed either as a primer/surfacer, or as a sealer, where a base or clear component is added; perhaps that’s a good final step.

So, today’s work…sanded the epoxy coat on the HS/VS tips — that stuff is hard.  Which is as intended, really…but I was still surprised at the amount of work it took to sand.  These are now ready for the priming/finishing steps.  I need to get the rest of the empennage tips to this stage as well, then I’ll have a go with whatever process I settle on.

The next big job was to create the union between the lower cowl and the airbox.  Firstly, the front snout of the airbox needed to be trimmed back sufficiently to give clearance for the cowl to drop down vertically, so it can be removed with the prop in place.  This took several on-off-trim-test cycles with the lower cowl; I put the top plate of the box on the servo and trimmed that to fit, then trimmed the fiberglass bowl once the last trim point had been established.  I cut a hole through the middle of the foam blocks attached yesterday with a hole saw, then used files to work it out to the necessary size and shape.  During this process, I discovered that the epoxy I used yesterday to glue the two pieces of foam together was too hard for the job; the rear foam piece cracked off when the hole saw hit the layer of hard epoxy.  So, I made some measurements and fit another piece of foam to the aft side, using contact cement and a screw in each corner because I’m impatient and didn’t want to wait for it to set up.  That worked out, and I was able to shape a nice transition to the airbox.

  

With the transition duct mold done, I had to do a layup to form the actual duct.  Wetting out the cloth (2 layers of the Rutan bid) was easy, putting it in place inside the duct, and getting it to stay there, was another story, but I emerged victorious, if a bit sticky.  To finish off the inside, I cut another piece of cloth, some lighter, tighter weave stuff I got, and laid that up as the final inside layer, which should leave it a bit easier to finish than the relatively coarse cloth.  I secured this all in position and left it to cure.  Later in the day, I trimmed the long excess and brushed a layer of epoxy on the inside, as the first step toward finishing.  Sanding inside that duct will be fun…  Tomorrow, assuming it’s set up enough, I’ll remove the foam and lay up another layer or two of cloth around the outside of the duct to securely fix it to the cowl.

 

Spent a bit of time cleaning up the shop, stuffing the trash pile in the corner into the garbage can and sweeping, before moving to the next task.

I decided to tackle cutting and fitting the airseal fabric on the engine baffles.  Started by making templates of all the baffle tops from cardboard, then cutting 3″ wide pieces of fabric matching those curves.  Laid out a rivet pattern on both side baffles, and drilled/deburred.  Taped the fabric in place and marked the holes, then drilled them in the fabric on the bench–the fabric is tough to drill, and didn’t drill well in place.  Even on the bench, it didn’t really drill, just poked a hole through.  Some have had luck here with leather punches, though I can get clecoes and rivets through the holes, so I don’t know how critical that would be.

The side baffles are in two pieces, to match the fore/aft split in the baffles.  I made nice curved pieces for the front segment, but they needed to be cut once in place in order for the fabric to bend over properly.  One cut overlaps itself, but the other opens up a gap, so I made a gap filler piece for each side, as well.  The aft segment, which came next, is also in two pieces, and the right side is captured between the baffle itself and the bracket which is bolted to the engine case.  Laying the top cowl on, it seems like these will work.  I need to see what’s needed for adhesive when affixing these — I bought some Pliobond earlier, but for these which are riveted, perhaps just red RTV is the thing to do.  I have not yet dealt with the front baffle, since it needs additional trimming and figuring out the interface to the top cowl.

  

Also need to sort out how the airseal fabric works at the front of the airbox; it appears that it’s riveted to the outside of the airbox, and seals as best it can around the outside of the cowling duct, not the inside.  I made the second piece of foam the right thickness so that the foam very nearly touches the opening of the FAB as currently trimmed, and I’ll trim the fiberglass of the duct to that point before removing the foam, so that obtaining the correct gap between cowl duct and FAB will be an easy task of measure and trim.

Hours: 9.2 | Posted in Cowling & Baffles, Wing & Tail Joins | Comments Off

5th August 2011

Fiberglass, mostly

More work on the fiberglass stuff…

  • Trimmed yesterday’s layup on the FAB; spread some flox/epoxy into the gap, and added another ply of glass on the inside.
  • Scraped and sanded the epoxy runs off the HS/VS tips; the epoxy isn’t fully cured yet so will wait until later to sand, when it’s harder.
  • Did a little cleanup on the empennage fairing, scraping off the unidentified brown goo splotches from the factory.
  • Tacked the foam block into the cowling snout.

 

And a bit of non-fiberglass stuff for sanity…

  • Torqued & sealed the fuel hoses at the flow transducer; FWF fuel system now complete.
  • Torqued & sealed the oil cooler lines; oil system now complete.
  • Deburred & dimpled the flanges of everything subpanel & forward…moving toward riveting the top skin.  Also had to remove the canopy pin mechanism, which will be fun to reinstall from under the panel while laying upside down…
  • Removed the camloc strips, deburred and dimpled the attach holes.
  • Cut a sheet of .020 and bent an angle into the edges, then fit it to the bottom of the fuel pump mounting plate.  Since this piece has a bunch of nutplates on the bottom of it, and many tubes & wires run beneath it, I decided that having a sheet in there would be a good idea to prevent any possible chafing (there is clearance between the plate and the bundles, but just in case, vibration and all that…).  This looks like it will do the job nicely.  It’s tacked to the mounting plate with a blob of Goop at each corner, and one in the center.

    

Doing some evening reading and working up a list for tomorrow, when I’ll again ignore all the other work that needs to be done to spend the day in the shop.

Hours: 3.4 | Posted in Cowling & Baffles, Engine, Wing & Tail Joins | Comments Off

4th August 2011

Fiberglass up and wait

Long week of work at work, and haven’t really had/taken time to work on the plane.  Looks like flying this weekend will be a bust due to the schedule at the FBO.  Off to the shop tonight to make some way on a bit of fiberglass work; this gets annoying because you can only do so much before you have to put it down and let it sit until the epoxy is cured.

  • Laid up 2 plies of glass at 45* to each other on the FAB split.  I’ll let this cure, then add more glass to the inside of the box.
  • Brushed on a coat of epoxy over the shaped/sanded micro on the elevator & rudder tips.
  • Sanded on the upper cowl inlet ramps until my arm wore out, smoothing the micro that was applied earlier.
  • Added a small layup of a couple plies of fabric on the inside of the emp fairing, the top aft side where it is torn (came out of the box that way).
  • Filed a bevel on the inside of the air intake snout, the first step of creating the duct that routes the air into the FAB.
  • Cut the supplied foam block from the FAB kit in half and glued the two halves together, in prep for fitting it to the cowl snout and FAB.
  • Went back to the shop later in the evening and put down another coat of epoxy on the elevator/rudder tips.

Hours: 2.1 | Posted in Canopy & Frame, Wing & Tail Joins | Comments Off