EZFlap wrote:If you buy some decent angle iron, or those perforated steel angles that have a million round and oblong holes in them, and screw those angles around the perimeter of your bench top, and then screw them across the bottom of your bench top every 12 or 18 inches, the angles should accomplish a few good things.
They will resist the bowing or sagging or warping of the bench top.
They will give you a good way to tie in the uprights, diagonals, gussets, etc.
You can add more of the angles between the uprights to support shelves
You can tie in the bottoms of the uprights
Also, you can stack up these angles several at a time and cut them with a chop saw.
Love the new username... apparently the 701 project means that Emory is not Bored anymore
This is some clear thinking here. I hadn't thought of a hybrid like that and it makes good sense. I have looked at steel framing as I have done more welding in my life that was good for me. Back in the day of $.40 a pound steel prices this would have made a great deal of sense. That perforated steel angle may be the ticket.
The 701 wings have no washout. That function is carried out with flaperon mounting along the trailing edge. The real challenge as I see it, is the coupling of the rear fuselage to the forward section. All of that assembly has to be jigged up pretty solid or you got a problem. With the CH750 those holes are pre-drilled. Not so on the 701.
As I mentioned, I've built one of these table before. It <(I wonder why I had "I" instead of "it" here for several days. Must be the weather) was a POS because the tabletop joists were not stable. Warping and divots ensued. I'm thinking some sort of kiln dried framing is in order but even then the stuff will move. Once the forward/rear fuselage junction is made I don't think I care. I do have enough
immensely expensive spruce spar stock left over from a Skybolt project that is rock solid. I'll have a table that I can trust but that lumber belongs in a biplane wing not on some future bonfire. We'll see.
Anyway, as to the username change I think it was time. Emory Bored was a gritty and abrasive sort. Mister701 might be kinder and gentler? Maybe. He's still the last of the world's great human beings though.....
BTW, the Luscombe has a new owner. An all rating ex military pilot who's unsure of his medical status in years to come.
Thanks for the comments boys
Mr.