Haven't had a lot of visual progress the past few days as I've been waiting on parts and doing the tedious tasks like routing oil/fuel pressure lines from firewall to panel. Might as well camp in here now...

While waiting on wiring and the new radio, I went ahead and worked out the radio stack and various closeout panels. I don't like swiss cheese radio mounting rails so I put some new rails in for the radio and txp to mount to. Made the small panel below transponder for intercom and avionics bus breakers. This keeps all avionics bus stuff over in that stack, so the avionics switch will send power from the main bus on right side of plane over to the radio stack. Behind the avionics breakers/intercom, I made a shelf for the encoder as well as an avionics ground bus. I don't like ground wires going all over the place, so this will keep them tidy and make everything modular. Will do a similar main ground bus on the right side. I also made the main bus breaker closeout on the right side and that little piece of aluminum up top for USB ports which covers a couple old instrument holes. Now all that stuff is at the powdercoater - they were running a load of black today ad fit me in for free since it was just a few small aluminum parts.


Got the metal for the main upper panel to started on it. Done exept for the 660 hole, need to verfiy it's positioning before cutting. Also there's one instrument mount hole missing which was intentional. No, I did not cut 1/16" alum with those shears. I'm not that strong.

These are my favorite tools for knocking out quick panels by hand. The ATS instrument hole punch and it's accompanying mount hole locator thing makes these a breeze. Cut through this 1/16" thick aluminum like butter. The Whitney punch is also incredible, makes using a drill feel silly if the punch can reach where you need a hole. And for some reason this blue sharpie is the best sharpie of all time. I don't know, don't ask questions, it just is. I would prefer to design these in CAD and have them waterjet or laser cut, but I can do this by hand in about an hour. It just gets old remaking them when I mess it up.



















