Unintended Adventures

Tag: S-20 Page 1 of 5

Inspection and First Flight!

Leading up to the inspection was relatively crazy. Having some final reviews of the systems and the manuals ensuring no parts were forgotten in addition to completing some final clean up tasks for the build.

We spent a good half day looking over the airplane two days before the inspection. We found some minor issues that were resolved quickly. I headed out to Ankeny the day before the inspection, got to the hangar around five, and then was there until shortly after midnight cleaning and finishing my last minute tasks.

The day of the inspection arrived and it was getting somewhat exciting. I met the DAR at the FBO and had a surprise addition from the local FAA office so the FAA could do a routine supervising of the DAR for their purposes. Both of the guys were great and very laid back. We headed out to the hangar to start the inspection. Once at the hangar they started about their business. I ended up with about 10 items to fix on the plane, but they were all minor which was the best part. A few examples were adding On-Off labels to some switches and fixing some marginal safety wire. The inspection took about an hour and then we headed to the FSDO to complete the paperwork. We spent another hour doing the paperwork and talking through some common build errors, first flight mistakes, and a few more questions about my plane specifically. At the end of it I ended up with some fancy documents proving I now had an airplane and we parted ways.

I went back to the hangar to work on my list of discrepancies and accomplished the moajority of them that afternoon. I was pretty wiped out, so I headed back to Iowa City in the evening to get ready to go back to real work the next day.

We weren’t sure what the weekend was going to hold for weather, so we were cautious about committing to any flight times. Friday night it seeemed like the following morning was going to work out great. We made the call and headed out to Ankeny Saturday morning planning to do some thorough preflight inspections and if we felt good, perform the first flight.

We ended up needing to re-pitch the propeller to meet guidelines set by my engine manufacturer, Rotax, so that delayed the flight decision for a little while. After we were satisfied everything looked good, the weather drastically improved and I figured that if the flight was going to happen, there wasn;t a better time for it.

So late morning on Saturday the 23rd of May 2019, I strapped myself into my little RANS S-20 and started her up. Everything was looking good and the temps were coming up to normal ranges. I taxied out to the runway to do a runup and get ready to takeoff. The runup was smooth and I taxied out onto the runway and lined up on the centerline. I think I sat there for about 45 seconds trying to hype myself up before pushing the throttle to the firewall and get the show going. With just myself in the plane it felt like I spent only 10 seconds on the ground before I was climbing my way above Ankeny. The climb rate was very impressive to the planes I usually fly. I was seeing over 1000 feet per minute and I wasn’t really trying to climb to hard.

I climbed to about 2500 feet which was as high as the clouds would allow and started orbiting. I talked back to a fellow builder on the ground about some elevated oil and coolant temps which led to me making the call to go ahead and land.

I hadn’t developed complete trust in my airspeed indicator after flying for only 30 minutes, but it seemed to have me in the ballpark and I knew the winds, so I could get pretty close with GPS. The airpseed seemed quite accurate when I was slower, but I decided to fly a bit fast and tht was easily doable in the RANS and still have plenty of runway margin. I can get stopped very short, so the 5,000 foot runway was plenty enough for me to screw up and float a ways.

I came in about 50 knots and zero flaps. The stall speed in the clean configuration is 33 knots, so I had a ton of margin. I wasn’t sure about the sight picture on landing, but the extra speed allowed me to slowly find the runway after I rounded out at the bottom of the approach. I made a fairly decent three point landing, taxied back to the hangar (pretty proud and happy), and met Maria and a great friend that has assisted me in the build process.

The first flight was an amazing experience after building the plane for 4 years. It couldn’t have been been possible without the help of some great friends and of course Maria. She put up with a ton of nonsense and helped in the construction a lot when she could. This whole project really developed a lot of skills that I never would have gained doing any other project. It also has a sort of weird camaraderie with other people who subject themselves to this insane lifestyle.

My plan is to continue to post updates to this website as I fly the airplane. As I publish this post, I am currently at 22 hours out of 40 in the flight test period. It has been an incredibly honest airplane with no major issues. I have augmented the oil cooling system and I will detail that addition in a future post.

(40 h and done 😎)

Am I done yet?

This is a fairly big update since I haven’t written anything down for a while.

So a quick overview of some of the progress since the last update. I worked on painting the boot cowl, rigging the flaps, installing the jury struts, installing the flap gap seals, checking out brake system, fabricating wear plates for the floorboard, fitting and trimming the interior, and finalizing/fixing some wiring.

The painting is never much to talk about since it is a sort of magical skill that never seems to be attainable. I painted the boot cowl, aileron/flap exit covers, a ton of inspection covers, the windshield hold down strip, the air vent NACA scoops, and the flap gap seal. Everything came out pretty decent. One thing in my favor was that all the parts were laid mostly flat, so it made me look better than my paint skills probably are. The items that remain to be painted is still almost too high to count, but the boot cowl put a big dent in the big parts list. The cowling and wingtips will be the last big parts. I will more than likely push off painting the cowling till I am in flight test. The main reason is in case I have to modify it during flight test.

The fuel system has been completely installed and fittings are tightened. I still need to check for leaks and test the fuel flow.

All fluid hoses forward of the firewall have been located and installed.

I added fluid to the brake system and bled the brakes. A week or two later, I noticed that the parking brake was leaking. I drained the system and ordered a rebuild kit from Matco. I haven’t rebuilt it yet, but hopefully next week so I can get the system bled and working again.

My tailwheel tire was flat for a while and I didn’t pay any attention to it. I noticed yesterday when I put air in it that it developed some cracks in the sidewall, so I will order a replacement tire prior to flight test.

I fit the interior pieces I had. I ended up buying some additional pieces that didn’t come with my plane. They were kick panels of sorts and really do a nice job at closing out the lower sides near the floorboard. This was a somewhat tedious operation of trimming, installing, trimming, and then installing again. I also trimmed and fitted the aft closeout that goes in front of the baggage compartment. That was more tedious than the first pieces. Another addition to the interior was wear plates for your heels on the floorboard. I used two 6″x24″ pieces of aluminum with some rubber edging material. They look pretty good.

Rigging the flaps was pretty straight forward. Everything was done by the manual.

The jury struts were fairly straight forward. The difference from the manual was that the aft jury strut needs to be trimmed so as to not deflect the aft lift strut. I can explain this in more detail for those who have questions. It wasn’t a big deal, but there isn’t a mention in the manual I have and the parts were already powder coated. I would also not drill the hole in the aft lift strut until you trim it and can fit it up. My jury struts have a lightening hole for superior weight savings 🙂

An interesting part of the jury strut is that there is a fairing at the aft section where the flap cable exits. Nothing too hard there, but you do need to have it ready in order to final install the jury struts.

I moved the flap gap seals about 3/16″ above the flap hinges in order to make it easier to access the flap attach bolts. This worked out ok, but I did have a few spots where the seal was too close to flap and I needed to trim it.

After convincing myself I didn’t need landing lights, I bought landing lights. I ran the initial wiring for them and will finish that up during the next work day. I am using a small off road light from Baja Designs.

I did get a good bit of work on the skylight done this past weekend. I had the help of two friends which was incredibly helpful. Doing it alone would have been annoying. The first part is to fit up the skylight ribs. Definitely helps to have more than one person. On my kit, the tabs at the aft of the skylight area that are used to attach the outer ribs, are too low. This meant we had to make some brackets and locate holes in the bracket. All I used was a piece of aluminum sheet and it worked out great. The ribs do not perfectly match the wing shape. I tried forming them some and also I helpd a little bit by compressing them from the aft part. That causes it to bow upwards which helped make the shape. The shape still wasn’t perfect, but it seems to be somewhat common and I will use some foam to fill the gap. I am also thinking about making some standoffs to make it more rigid than foam.

The next steps will be finalizing the skylight install. There are a lot of holes to drill. I need to finalize some of the wiring for the landing lights, leak test the fuel system, and start getting ready for another painting session.

The plane is really coming along and it is starting to make me think I will actually have a plane soon!

(30 h)

Jan-Feb

It’s been cold and I live far away from the airplane, but progress continues. After 4 years I have also apparently run out of clever titles. Maybe next time.

So here is the update blast.

The wing is rigged. I need to verify that the rigging is still correct once I torque the wing connections. Rigging the flaps was relatively easy and all that is left in that system is painting the exit covers after trimming them for the jury strut. I started to rig the ailerons, but I haven’t adjusted the cable tension and therefore have to wait on that. Once I get the ailerons rigged, the plane as a whole can be considered rigged unless something makes itself known during flight test.


In other wing news, I trimmed and fitted the flap gap seals that bridge the gap between the wing trailing edge and the flap leading edge. I moved them to be about 1/16″ higher than the top of the flap hinge to allow easier access to the flap hinge bolts and avoid trimming the entire length of the gap seal. It was a little sad to drill holes into the aft spar, but progress waits for no one (it only waits on complicated ideas from my brain that take time away from actually building).

For the lubrication system I finally figured out some hose routing that I was satisfied with and I seem to have avoided buying any other hoses. I did use two 45 degree adapters at the oil pump housing to allow a better route for the hose. So the oil hoses are installed now and the bolts have been safety wired. I will have to remove one hose to add some oil to the cooler initially, but no big deal. All that is left for this is to add oil and pressurize it to make sure it gets where it needs to go. I also installed a cooling fan to the oil cooler to increase the cooling capability. Some other S-20 builders have had oil temp issues and they have solved them in various ways, so we shall see if my install is any good shortly. 🙂

I redid the coolant hoses this past weekend, because I didn’t like all the worm gear hose clamps I used. I changed most of them to Oetiker stepless clamps and then used self tensioning Oetiker spring clamps for the removable sections. It looks much better. I also used the stepless ear clamps on some of the fuel lines I had not already assembled.

On the fuel side, I am waiting on some new hose clamps to secure the header tank. Once this is done I just need to do a final check of all the fittings. I am also installing some aluminum heat shielding to the fuel hose that goes from the gascolator to the fuel pump. It passes awfully close to the muffler and I don’t want the fuel getting too hot.

I have added some header wrap and aluminum heat shield to various parts of the exhaust system to try and help protect some components in the cowling. Time will tell how that works. The exhaust system is completely installed and the exhaust nuts have been torqued.

I have some minor wiring left to do. This involves the wires to the starter. I hope to complete this in the next few weeks.

I installed the throttle and choke cables. The only control cable not installed is the parking brake, which I am planning to do this weekend.

Looking ahead to this weekend, I am planning to install the jury struts, final install the fuel system, finalize hose positions forward of the firewall, start to fit the interior, bleed the brakes, and maybe start some fuel system tests.

(30 h)

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Fuel shutoff valve offset mount

So Close

Not much exciting things to show since the wings went on. It has been a lot of wiring to wrap up the avionics and also to get the engine wired up. But, that is coming to a potential end and I wanted to get something written down before the end of the year.

(If you’re reading this on the 31st of December 2018, there are no pictures because my iPhone doesn’t like to be below 30% battery when it is 32 deg F or below. I’ll get some photos tomorrow and add them to the post.)

The avionics wiring is complete. I will make the wire runs a little prettier, but all the wires go to what they need to go to and nothing exploded. The wiring for the engine is almost complete. Currently I am working on finishing the wiring for the ignition/mag switch which will complete my engine wiring.

Hoses on the engine have been a not so fun endeavor. The hoses that are giving me problems are the oil hoses and specifically the hose from the oil pump housing to the oil cooler. The provided hose does not lend itself to any sort of acceptable routing and I fussed with it over the course of a few weeks before giving it up. I will have to make my own hose for that run, but I have put it off to accomplish some other tasks I had put off previously. I’m not sure if it was in a previous update, but I fabricated a hose to go from the firewall bulkhead fuel fitting to the gascolator and installed the Rotax fuel hose to the gascolator. I still need to install the return line fuel hose and the fuel pump vent hose. I also will make a vent tube similar to the oil tank breather vent for the fuel pump vent.

I was fitting up the radiator duct a while ago and realized I needed to install the oil hoses which led to me figuring out the fun in the paragraph above, so it is currently waiting for me to finalize the hoses. Something that came up with another builder is making an access panel in the radiator duct so the oil hose at the bottom of the engine can be accessed without removing the duct. It sounds like a good idea and I need to get some aluminum to accomplish that.

Probably should have put this sooner, but I installed the oil tank mount brackets. These are what sort of cradle the oil tank and get riveted to the engine mount. I hope to never have to remove those rivets. The manual calls for the use of pan head screws, but I had a hard time tightening the nut on and replaced them with some hex head bolts which worked fine. One thing spotted by someone else was that the heads of the screws or bolts will touch the oil tank. By using some plastic edging material on the aluminum angles, the tank is offset enough to avoid this. 

Another big item was finally diving into the header tank. I had put it off for a year and then bought an updated version from RANS and then put if off for another few months. I installed all the fittings into the tank, installed the mount for the new header tank. I also added a piece of aluminum angle to the read of the mount for added strength since the forward attach locations didn’t do much for the aft part of the tank and it will be relatively heavy with fuel in it. I also had to relocate the tank sump location. I marked it and then cut through the fabric. What I should have done is fabricated a new exit ring, glued it where I wanted the hole, and then cut the hole. Now I will fabricate the ring and glue it, but I probably could have gotten a better finish by doing it differently. I patched over the old opening with some extra fabric from cutting out some inspection cover holes. I still need to run the fuel lines from the wing tanks and to the firewall.

I final installed the flap lever. This was frustrating because somethings are off center and require some odd washer placement. There are also bushings to be fabricated and I don’t have a great way for getting those cut perfect, so I end up putting them on and taking them off a lot. In the end I added some washers as well because the right rod end would hit the fuselage frame when I tried to move it to the last detent. I added washers to center the cables better and avoided this. It is still close, so I may file some of it away to provide better clearance. The material that would be filed away is not a structural tube, so I think it will be safe to do.

Things that are up on the list are installing the jury struts, installing flap gap seal, rigging the wing (and control surfaces), finalizing the oil hose issue, installing fuel return/pump vent hoses, and finalizing the routing of wiring on the firewall forward side. 

My engine monitor has also progressed quite a bit. I had thought my software was in a pretty good place and then I installed it into the panel and found some bugs in the data acquisition and sensor conversion code. I fixed those and now my only issue is not understanding how to auto start the application after booting and I need to integrate a real time clock into the board so it actually keeps track of the date and time. The latter should be the easier one to fix and I just placed an order for an updated PCB.

In related aerospace news, I am finally graduated from Iowa State with a B.S. in Aerospace Engineering! It was a crazy 3.5 years to get to this point and it took  lot of hard work. A lot of thanks goes to Maria for agreeing and supporting more school. I also owe a lot to all the friends who shared the misery of engineering school and the large group projects that accompany it. It was a ton of fun to go back to school and intern with some exciting companies. I’m looking forward to a fun career.

I learned a lot of new stuff that has guided me toward some neat projects that I am hoping will turn into big things. I am really interested in manufacturing composites and hopefully some structural composites as well in addition to making parts from metals and plastics. I’d like to think I could make a business out of it at some point, but there is a lot of learning and tool acquisition required before that point. I have some neat ideas for upgrades to the RANS and also some standalone ideas, but they will have to wait till the RANS is actually flying.

(40 h)

This is an airplane

Friday was a fun day. We were able to get the wings and struts installed to the airplane.

We learned a lot about putting them on. The main hold up was fitting the struts to the strut attach plate on the wing. I had filed them prior to installing the wings, but they were still too tight to easily work with when the blocks/cubes were installed into the strut.

As with most airplane building tasks, patience is definitely the key. There were times y mind jumped to solutions for issues that would have worked, but they would have not worked nearly as well as the solution that came from having multiple people think about the best way to overcome it.

Fitting the forward strut to the fuselage was a lot less painful than I had imagined it. We went at it with a Dremel with a cutoff wheel to get it close and then used files to go the rest of the way and radius the edges so the spar could slide onto the fuselage. We did this all with the wing attached at the aft spar and resting on 6 ft ladders with some foam. This allowed us to quickly test fit the spar and then move it out of the way to continue to remove material from the fuselage.

I highly recommend making a bushing to drill an initial hole through the forward spar. I had bought some 3/8″ steel tube with an ID of 1/4″. This pinned the spar into place as it should be. Then we removed it and slid a 3/8″ bit through the spar and fuselage. Once it was in place, we put the drill chuck onto it and drilled the 1/4″ hole out to 3/8″. It worked great.

If anyone has questions, let me know. I don’t have a ton of detailed photos for this unfortunately. It was about a 7.5 hour job for us which included lunch and spending a lot of time slowly filing the strut attach blocks so they would fit onto the wing. Another area we had to lightly file was the block that attaches the forward strut to the fuselage. We had to take material off of the bottom curved section in order to get a bolt through it and the fuselage.

It’s getting closer.

(9 hr – An extra 2 hours because I went to the hangar early to try and make sure everything was ready 🙂 )

[youtube https://www.youtube.com/watch?v=1c825K8wJKU]

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Time marches on

Lots of good stuff in this update. No major steps completed, but a lot has been done to support some big tasks soon.

Since the last update I have been mainly wiring the panel and installing avionics. I am using fuses in my plane, so the first thing to do was located the position of the fuse blocks. I located them on the firewall. After that was done, I began to install switches and wire them to the fuse blocks. I also began making the radio and transponder rack connectors. My setup is pretty simple, but the G5 acts as an altitude encoder for the Appareo Stratus ESG, so they had to be tied in. The radio was the most involved device as it has headset jacks and some external audio jacks. I wired the left and right ears backwards, but that is an easy fix.

The hardest thing about the wiring for me is trying to keep it neat and functional. It’s hard to see where things are going without all the wires and then it’s hard to route the wires when they are a mess. It has taken a lot of time to try and get them routed sufficiently, but it is getting there.

Another issue I had was a switch I have on the copilot side to actuate the trim servo. I am using a momentary SPDT switch and I had to buy relays to make that switch work because the trim servo works by changing the polarity of the wires depending on which way you want to go. This is an ongoing issue. I just haven’t sat down to fix it.

Mounting a heater in the plane has been a battle I finally found a place that is decent, but it definitely is biased towards one side of the cockpit. An idea I have is to maybe create some ducting to help with that, but that will be after it flies. I need to keep moving and not spend a ton of time on stuff that is good enough to fly.

I’ve also got a beta version of the front half of the case for my engine monitor, so I have temporarily installed it to get some wiring done. I am working on finalizing the back half of the case this weekend and I hope to have it printed sometime next week. It looks great in the panel. My software work on it at the moment is just changes to fix any issues with the computer talking to the engine sensor data acquisition box.

I wanted to put the magnetometer in the wing, but I didn’t make any provision for this prior to covering. To solve this problem, I designed a mount to hold the magnetometer on a tube inside the wing that is accessible from an inspection panel. This was a cool solution and it seems to work great. I ran all the associated wires for the magnetometer and the G5 rewarded me by saying it was connected and everything was working great.

Onto the aircraft structure work. I have installed and rigged the elevators. It wasn’t as hard as I thought in the beginning. The big issue I found was stick interference with the interior cover panel that is forward of the seat. That will be easily fixed by just trimming that panel since it isn’t a structural part of the aircraft. Myself and another builder elected to replaced the riveted aluminum tube on the elevator push pull tube with aluminum split collars. This will allow me to change the elevator travel limits if I find that I have rigged it incorrectly. They work great as far as we can tell and seem to be a good solution. Another change was to exchange the bolts that attach the elevator control horn to the elevator with drilled head bolts. This allows them to be safety wired since the original bolts are relying on a nut plate for the locking feature of the bolt.

I got the wingtips fitted and trimmed. The only thing left is to add the aft rib to the wingtip which I will do when the wing is installed and the ailerons are rigged for neutral. I also drilled the holes in the wingtip to mount the wingtip lights.

An issue I had when I first worked on installing the engine was routing the coolant hoses to the cylinders. In order to clear the engine mount RANS has you exchange two hoses for a hose with an S bend. On the left side RANS instructions worked great, which are to install the S bend hos from the lower coolant pump fitting to the aft cylinder. On the right side, there wasn’t enough clearance. By making the S bend hose go from the lower coolant pump fitting to the forward cylinder, I was able to get decent clearance from the engine mount. I then final installed the bolts that hold the engine onto the engine mount.

I hope the wiring will be really done soon. I want to be finished. This coming weekend I will be installing the wings and checking a big box off. I’m excited to finally get them out of the wing stand. Today I finished assembling the lift struts and getting everything ready to mount the wings. Another upcoming task is routing the heater hoses from the heater to the engine coolant hoses on the forward side of the firewall. This has been a puzzle mainly because I’m trying to use 1/2″ hoses everywhere when it seems 5/8″ hose is much more common. It will be possible, but it’s just taking a little more time.

Stay tuned for more in Ryan’s quest to have a flying airplane!

(80 h)

 

Mad dash to the finish

The summer for students has come to an end and I’m back in Iowa. Summer job was fun, I learned a lot, and met some great people. Alas, it is now time for airplane building once again. A lot happened since the last update in March, so I’ll try to cover all of it.

I made a crazy work week before leaving for Denver in May to get a lot of stuff done. I accomplsihed most of what I wanted to do. I mounted the ailerons/flaps, fitted up the windshield, completed the second seat (that had been waiting since Thanksgiving of 2016), and prepped the hangar in case I got a hangar spot closer to home. The last bit did happen which was great. The plane now resides a mere 15 minutes from home compared to the 55 minutes it was for the last year. Still not quite as good as just being in the garage, but it’s too big now anyways. This should allow me to get a lot done on the plane these next 4-6 months (or until I convince someone to give me a job 🙂 ). I only have one class to finish up my fancy-pants degree and I will be doing some flight instruction, but I should be able to go full airplane build mode for most of the time.

The second great news is that we finally committed to finish the project and have purchased the avionics and the engine. The plane will use a Rotax 912ULS (100HP) engine. I started to become nervous about this before the decision since there was and still may be a chance we will move to higher elevations. The Rotax 914 would be the safest bet and make an awesome airplane, but in the end I couldn’t find any reason at this point in our lives to drop another $11k-13k on an engine to get a turbocharger. Maybe the next plane or when this 912 gives up.

The avionics are pretty bare bones. I’ll go into more depth when I get to wiring stuff, but I’ll have a Garmin G5 for primary flight information, a Appareo ESG transponder (RST Engineering has a great deal for EAA/AOPA), a Garming GTR200 radio, and my homegrown engine monitor (also looking at purchasing something from MGL as a backup and to reduce the risk that my engine monitor doesn’t want to work; I don’t want to delay flight testing for an engine monitor). The wingtip lights are the AeroLEDs Pulsar NSP variety. The other big (maybe controversial) decision was to forgo circuit breakers for most of the electronics. I will be using fuses for all of the equipment in the plane and then circuit breakers for the master and generator circuits. With my desire to fiddle with electronics, I couldn’t devise a plan that would let me hack the electrical system as easy as having banks of fuses with available slots. More to come as I get into wiring.

As I get further into the build, I find I have less and less to say about the specific tasks I’m doing. I wish I had more to say to help others, but I have been putting off writing these for too long after doing the tasks. I hope to change that moving forward.

One thing I will say about the boot cowl sides. For us tailwheel builders, you have a choice. You can either install the boot cowl sides with the gear off or you can trim the boot cowl sides to go around the gear blocks. I did the latter and ended up trimming off too much of the boot cowl and now I have a gap. I plan on getting some thin aluminum to extend the area I trimmed and make it a more flush finish with the fuselage. So if you’re tailwheel and don’t want to remove the gear to install the boot cowl, go very slow and check often. I think it would have gone better with another person to help me hold the boot cowl up and check interference. With only two hands, it gets difficult to check and trim quickly.

Some other small items being completed are on the firewall. This includes the battery box build up, and mounting the coolant overflow bottle. I had a very annoying spat with some stainless steel rivets on the battery box. The stem would pull completely out of the rivet on most of my attempts. I took a break, ordered some more rivets, and used some rivet backing washers. That solved the issue. Not sure what was wrong, but my casual internet reading (very dangerous) leads me to believe it may have been the rivets themselves, but I don’t know enough to say how much belief to put into that thought.

In general shop news, after 3.5 years of building I finally bought some shelves and a work table to supplement a small workbench. Not sure why I didn’t do it sooner, but I was younger then 🙂

The panel is off to the laser cutter in town and some more orders to Spruce and Digikey are inbound. I’ve attached a picture of the cutouts I’m making for the panel. Hopefully it works well. I think I could do much better from a human factors stand point, but we shall find out when it is flying.

I’ve been adding to this for a few weeks, so I’m pushing it out and I’ll be getting some more updates in the coming few days.

Assembly

Airplane building took a big hit this school year. The plane is in a hangar 50 minutes away now and the Fall semester was full of the usual projects and assignments to appease the professors.

Since the last update I’ve been working on mostly assembly tasks. The one thing that has kept me from positing an update is that I haven’t really finished any of those tasks. Sometimes due to a lack of time to finish and other times because I couldn’t find the right parts or I ran out of some of the more consumable parts (rivets and nylon lock nuts specifically).

But, things are still being accomplished. I’ll start from the present and work back to the last update.

I finally got the gear legs finished how I wanted them and installed onto to the plane. This involved installing the brake lines and fittings for the gear as well. I ended up buying new tubes with 90 degree stems on them because I could never manage to install the straight stem tubes in a way that would not interfere with the axle. I know it was a problem on my side, but I couldn’t quite figure it out. Another exciting part of assembling the main gear was not realizing I installed the brake caliper mounting plate in an incorrect orientation until after I had installed both wheels and installed the cotter pin. This was because I also failed to understand that I needed to install the brake caliper before installing the wheel since I no longer would have access to the back side of the mounting plate once the wheel was installed. Fixing that mess will take an hour or two I’m sure and I’ll be doing that on my next workday (Hopefully this coming Saturday).

I also managed to final install the tailwheel assembly and the horizontal stabilizers. The tailwheel assembly wasn’t hard, but my bushings between the blocks around the tail spring were too long and needed to be shortened slightly. Once that was done, I set to tightening the tail brace wires and rigging the stabilizer. I tried my best to complicate matters and be engineer-y about it to find a specific value that the tension in the wires needed. After bugging RANS and some A&P friends it was determined that there is not a specific value called for and “feels right” was the needed tension. Oh well… They seem to be tight enough and fall in line with what other similar brace wires I’ve dealt with before (Cub, Champ).

I managed to bolt on the left elevator and it is ready to be connected to the elevator push pull tube. One of my hinges was tweaked, but I put a wash in between the hinge and the stabilizer and it does not seem to be causing any excess friction. I’ll continue to monitor that hinge and check for any indications of excess stress since tightening the nut did apply what I consider more than normal force onto the hinge. The right side elevator is awaiting some more rivets to arrive so I can finish up the trim tab.

Onto the trim tab. I completed the assembly onto the elevator and had few issues. My assembly wasn’t perfectly straight and I needed to force one side of the tab maybe a 1/16″ forward in order for it to capture the bolt from the elevator. I also had to shave some material off of the most forward rivet on one side of the tab because it was interfering with the elevator. If any other builders read this and had a problem similar to this or no problem at all I’d be interested in hearing from you. I don’t have a ton of paint on my parts, but that and the fabric could definitely be contributing factors. The rivets are on order, so hopefully the right elevator can be mounted this weekend.

My list of things to do for the next work day are installing the brakes, get the control sticks mostly installed, and drill the stops on the elevator push-pull tube. Looking forward, once I have the push pull tube stops in place, I can place the aft baggage compartment and finally get it back off the ground.

Till next time…

(25 h)

Whirlwind

Summer is slowly coming to an end and things are getting crazier for us. Moving to a new place in a week so I can finish my engineer transformation, finishing an internship, starting classes again, and going to Oshkosh all in the next month.

The plane is painted (mostly)! There are still all the exit covers, inspection plates, boot cowl, and some trim colors on the doors and rudder, but all the major assemblies are painted. Covering and painting is about all we did on the plane this summer and it was a busy task. I don’t care for painting and am glad that it is mostly finished. The rest of it will be an exercise in finding the space and equipment to do so, but it shouldn’t be insurmountable.

The plane has also been moved. After 2.5 years of half living in a garage and the other half in storage, all the airplane parts are finally together again in a hangar. It looks much cooler in a hangar and it’s even neater to see everything together. The only annoying part is that there are no hangars available nearby where we are moving to, so it’s about 50 minutes away from the house. There is an airport 10 minutes from the house, but even after a year and a half on the wait list, I haven’t risen to the top. Looking forward to getting some things actually assembled this coming year and making it look more like an airplane finally.

That’s about all the airplane stuff for the past two months. I could write a small essay on painting issues, but nothing has to do with the paint I used. A lot of operator learning/error. If you want to hear more, let me know and we can discuss a few things.

As this is posted, we have completed the move. I’m still busy being an intern for another week and a half and then I’ll join back up to start the new semester.

Oshkosh was great. We saw a lot of cool things, got to play with some avionics, and visited with friends.

(80 h)

School’s out for summer

Finally moved in back at the real house and classes are done for the Spring semester. Three more semesters left before I can be a real boy again.

I finished the other half of the stabilizer I started covering 4 weeks ago, so now I just need to cover the elevators and then I can start working on the tapes and the patches. I don’t mind tapes and patches since they seem to go much quicker than covering entire pieces.

(Everything above this was written a month ago when I thought I was ready to push out an update. Everything below is a collection of stuff I have done since then.)

Today is the culmination of a task that has taken us nearly 1.5 years. The actual time from the cracking the first bottle of glue open to getting everything ready to get to the paint shop was one year, five months, and twenty-one days. I started in December 2015 and finished today, June 2017. I never envisioned it taking this long, but When I started I was still at home, taking classes at the local community college. No more than 3 weeks after I started covering is when I went back to the big university to begin the Aerospace Engineering journey. It was hard to work on it during the school months since covering takes quite a bit of set-up and clean-up. It’s hard to just do an hour of covering because not a lot really gets done.

So, this past week my wife and I had a week off from work and my busy intern life to relax and catch up on everything we have been putting off for the past nine months. We thankfully got to work a lot on the plane and put in probably 50 man hours over the week to get the covering finished. It was a long process, but it was awesome to get that chapter closed this past week. It has been an open task for so long that I thought we would never get done with it. I enjoy covering and there is an artistic aspect to it which is nice, but I think I will need to space out my covering projects by at least a couple of years :-).

On to the details. Most of the work we had to do was putting patches and tapes onto pieces we had already covered. The only pieces that weren’t completely covered were the elevators. I ran short of fabric again and had to order another two yards. In the end I had to order an additional eight yards of fabric on top of the fabric I received from RANS. Come of this I know I would have needed regardless, but some of the extra fabric probably would’ve been avoided with more careful planning and layout of the parts.  On the flip side, the fabric is relatively cheap and probably a lot less stress than coming up short after thinking you laid out the piece properly.

I’ll list a few things I noticed while covering that may be of some interest to others embarking on this journey.

Since it is what we did last, I’ll start with the elevators. These weren’t hard, they just had a lot of sides and two curved edges that made things a little interesting. For the curved edges, my only advice is when laying down the fabric, make sure you have a decent bit of excess so you have enough to shrink the fabric to make the curve look pretty without and wrinkles. Mine are pretty ragged because it took me a while to get my technique down, but I wasn’t planning on winning any show awards. I started shrinking at the middle of the curve and then worked my way outwards. For the tapes in these areas, I tacked the tape down on one side of the curve and the pulled the tape from the other end to get the tape to follow the curve better and it helped to get the tape to lay down along the curve. I then tacked the middle of the tape down along the entire curve. After that, I started shrinking the tape from the outside of the curve and worked my way to the middle while alternating on each side of the curve. This is what seemed to work best for me, but maybe you’ve got a better idea on how to do it?

The last trick to the elevators is the stitching. It’s all straight forward except the stitch that is only on one side of the elevator since the bottom side has a plastic exit ring for the trim servo. I put the bottom fabric piece on and then the top piece of fabric on so the top would look better. If you do that, the stitch becomes a little difficult. The problem is that the tube you are stitching around is about the total amount of space between the 2 layers of fabric. I didn’t have a fancy curved needle that could make that bend, so we improvised. I did put a slight bend in my needle for the process to help aid it. First I went through the top of the fabric and out the bottom inside the trim servo exit ring. Then after I pulled the needle out of the bottom, I went back through the same hole and then out the other side of the plastic ext ring still on the bottom side. Then I pulled the needle completely through that hole and then sent the needle back through that hole to pierce through the top layer of fabric in line with the other top side hole but on the opposite side of the tube we are trying to stitch. I didn’t care about the hole inside the exit ring since we will cut that out. The other hole I made in the bottom part of the fabric wasn’t bad, but I put a tiny circular patch over it anyway to feel good. It worked great even though it was sort of round-a-bout. If anyone has another way they did it, I’d like to hear it.

The other pieces didn’t prove to be too much of an issue. I didn’t shrink the door fabric much past 250 (except where I had wrinkles), but ironing the tape edges and patch edges did shrink it a little more than I initially did, so we will see soon enough if that means I get the opportunity to make new door trim pieces (YAY!).

If anyone has any questions about the covering process, feel free to reach out to me. I’m not an expert, but I probably have made most of the mistakes you could make for a first-time covering. In case anyone is only reading this post, we used the Stewart Systems covering products. I’ve enjoyed them and I haven’t had to wear a respirator and I did a lot of covering on the kitchen table during the winter.

So what’s next? I’ll kick off the painting process this coming week and if I don’t slack off and don’t upset the person helping me paint, I hope to have them done by the end of June (that’s my hope 🙂 ).

I need to definitely get them done before July as we will be moving and I’ll lose access to the folks who have been helping me a lot with the plane over the past two years. I did find a hangar after a few hiccups with the local airport. It’ll be an hour drive away, but it was better than the storage unit alternative.

I probably won’t have too much to report on the next month since I’ll be focused on trying to get the paint on, but I’ll try to get some pictures and a quick update on what they look like throughout the process.

Hope to see some folks at Oshkosh this year!

(80 h)

 

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