
Got a offer of help with the welding and in my excitement I failed to check the tail post. It's bent so now I have to cut off the brace we welded last night.
DRLpatrol wrote:Kevin wrote:...... I made my gear legs 3" taller as my ski's I have for my ship have some really low pedestal's, that is my only design change and I ran that by Mr Barrows before I did it......
Kevin, Do you hang out at bearhawkforums.com much. I would like to hear more about the extended gear. Did you make it with heavier wall tubing or just longer? Are the legs 3" longer or does the plane actually sit 3" higher? I am just getting started on a Patrol and would like it to sit a little higher, I'm 6'5" so a little higher would make it easier to get in. And look cool.
Doug
Kevin wrote:Sorry for piggy backing your thread Whee. I will abstain from that from here on. Look forward to seeing your progress.
Kevin wrote:DRLpatrol wrote:Kevin wrote:...... I made my gear legs 3" taller as my ski's I have for my ship have some really low pedestal's, that is my only design change and I ran that by Mr Barrows before I did it......
Kevin, Do you hang out at bearhawkforums.com much. I would like to hear more about the extended gear. Did you make it with heavier wall tubing or just longer? Are the legs 3" longer or does the plane actually sit 3" higher? I am just getting started on a Patrol and would like it to sit a little higher, I'm 6'5" so a little higher would make it easier to get in. And look cool.
Doug
I don't think the airplane sits more than an inch and a half taller due to the trigonometry of the gear being slightly wider. I used the .the spec'd out .065 for the gear legs. I have 8.50's mounted and may try some of those new smoothies that Desser has available but doubt ABW's are in my future. I would stick with stock length if you are planning ABW's, also if you plan on big rubber remember the gear leg trailing edge fairing needs to clear your tires. Johnson Creek is probably as back country as I will get. As to the B hawk forum I'm more of a lurker than anything. I've built several rag and tube airplanes and have my own way of getting tasks accomplished so don't post opinions much as I don't want to debate anybody on building techniques. Sorry for piggy backing your thread Whee. I will abstain from that from here on. Look forward to seeing your progress.
whee wrote:Sonnufa....
IMG_1295 by whee8e, on Flickr
IMG_1298 by whee8e, on Flickr
IMG_1296 by whee8e, on Flickr

Whee, how in the world will you ever know if you don't stress relieve? Somewhere in the back pages of my mind I recall a procedure calling for clockwise or anti-clockwise heating from cluster to cluster beginning at the firewall and moving aft. Apparently this minimizes the distortion. I dunno, more research is needed. Call an EAA tech counselor. The other option is to assemble and cut some surplus steel to the dimensions needed for a frame of some sort. Make the connections to the fuselage with short pieces of lumber or plywood and the steel frame from channel bolted to the floor. With new steel you'll need several hundred dollars but with surplus it would be about half that. Still several hundred. Ha! Anyway, the suggestion to hire the local professional sounds good to me, even if only to get a plan in place. BE SURE!whee wrote:Last night I cut off the brace so I could straiten the tail post. I carefully trimmed it off and was ready to straiten things out so I had my wife come hold the fuselage from moving while I carefully pulled on the post. The post was bent at the top longeron; it was pushed forward 3/4" at the upper rudder hinge location which is ~24" up from the longeron. It wasn't going to take much to get it straight so I pulled very carefully. This is where my metallurgical lesson comes in. This fuselage had been TIG welded with no stress relieving done and according to everyone I spoke with, no problem.
Well...IMG_1295 by whee8e, on Flickr
IMG_1298 by whee8e, on Flickr
IMG_1296 by whee8e, on Flickr
<snip> I don't have a jig for the fuselage and it could twist from all the heat. Not sure what I'm going to do about stress relieving.
ds. I'm not excited about stress relieving all the clusters because I don't have a jig for the fuselage and it could twist from all the heat. Not sure what I'm going t
I've talked to Bob about how to fix it and he suggests I splice in a new piece rather than replace the whole thing. Replacing the whole post leaves more room from things to move; the risk is greater than the reward.

Kevin wrote:There are so many opinions on stress relieving or not and I won't enter into that debate.
Battson wrote:I am amazed that cracked with just your body weight... What did Bob have to say about that?
Battson wrote:You had massive leverage on that weld that broke, the completed fuselage will have no situations like that.


Zzz wrote:Battson wrote:You had massive leverage on that weld that broke, the completed fuselage will have no situations like that.
+1. Few other joints would ever be subjected to that kind of strain.
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