AdamB
Pre-takeoff checklist
The T-shirt is missing "bleed"
Nauga,
who did.
Haven’t we all?
I’ve left plenty of DNA evidence on my RV-10.
The T-shirt is missing "bleed"
Nauga,
who did.
Gotta build up them calluses.Yeah, it's not uncommon for my hands to be beat up, but sheetmetal work provides SO MANY unique opportunities for new cuts and holes. I got lucky yesterday; the drill bit hit my fingernail instead of tearing a hole in the flesh like the last two times.
Only if you're a xenomorph.I felt the need to research whether blood was corrosive to AL.
I see the entire home budget went into the RV-14, and now duck-taped wrapped around a blue shop paper towel is all you've got for band-aids!
Bandaids are for people who don't have duck tape and blue shop towels on handI see the entire home budget went into the RV-14, and now duck-taped wrapped around a blue shop paper towel is all you've got for band-aids!
If blue painter's tape doesn't hold it CA glue will.Bandaids are for people who don't have duck tape and blue shop towels on hand
I'm still excited to get the first one.I figured out the trick, so on my next RV-14...
A few minutes of "T" time huh?other responsibilities are getting put off
You have the early wing, or the later one with the honeycomb ribs prosealed to the skin?That's a lot of rivets, glad my BD-4 is glued together, mostly.
What was the ratio of sealant on the spar vs your hands and clothes?Used fuel tank sealant for the first time to make a fillet against the elevator rear spar.
I was really proud of myself. I managed to stay completely clean. The sealant was in one of those little pre measured caulk tubes so that helped. The spar is about 12" down inside the skins, and you have to make a 3/8 alum. tube to apply it through. The fact I was applying it a foot down in a hole probably helped too. I'm sure it will be a different story when I'm buttering ribs to build the fuel tanks.What was the ratio of sealant on the spar vs your hands and clothes?
That doesn't count as having used tank sealant then!The sealant was in one of those little pre measured caulk tubes so that helped.
Feel like maybe I earned it tonight.That doesn't count as having used tank sealant then!
My BnL (just started building a -10) sent me a text, picture, and question today referencing the "****ty plans".I'm struggling to resist ranting about what the manual has become.
Nauga,
and kids these days
Is that what you think of the build/instruction manual?
neither. the plans actually have a third option of conventional metal ribs. With each honeycomb rib being almost $100 (last time I checked) I decided on plan C. several others have gone metal ribs... there is a full build report (not mine) online linked from the bd-4 forumYou have the early wing, or the later one with the honeycomb ribs prosealed to the skin?
Interesting. When did that become an option? Are they glued to the skin, or riveted?third option of conventional metal ribs
Ha, no the manual is pretty amazing. About once every 10 pages or so there'll be a nasty surprise, but usually reading ahead would've solved that, so I guess that's on me. I was a little mad though because I had to drill a rivet out of a tight spot, and the bit just caught my finger and sliced it pretty good (obviously).Is that what you think of the build/instruction manual?
Maybe he should just send me the kits. (At a used discount) Since he's apparently in over his head.My BnL (just started building a -10) sent me a text, picture, and question today referencing the "****ty plans".
Um...
It is a lot of rivets, but in this example, nearly every one on the perimeter was set with pneumatic squeezer, and the skin rivets in the middle were all back riveted, both of which go really fast. I bet there's not an hour of riveting all together. The time is in part prep, which is a shame because the riveting is the fun part.That's a lot of rivets, glad my BD-4 is glued together, mostly.
Be careful here. Typically where Vans calls out the use of sealant as purely an adhesive it’s really being used as a liquid cleco vs actually structurally bonding pieces together. There are plenty of proseal substitutes in the aircraft aisle at Home Depot that will work just fine in that regard. What you want is something that doesn’t dry/cure rock hard but remains somewhat flexible.I'm curious about what kind of adhesive you use to build the BD. Van's uses tank sealant as glue in a number of places, but I'd assume that if you're building the whole airplane out of the stuff, there's some sort of structural epoxy? Hopefully something that sets faster than tank sealant?
I need to dig out the -6 plans and give him a "back in the day" story. I swear, you built the RV-6's wings in about 4 pages of text and probably 15 pages of dimensioned and orthogonal drawings. The real challenge was to make sure you assembled things in a sequence that didn't block you from doing something later in the build. 'Cause Van's didn't put most of that stuff in the plans - you had to look ahead and put some thought into it.Maybe he should just send me the kits. (At a used discount) Since he's apparently in over his head.
T-18. Big roll of drawings. Some articles in Sport Aviation. Have fun.I need to dig out the -6 plans and give him a "back in the day" story.
Whole lotta RV's built using Randall Henderson's supplemental instructions and the Matronics RV-list. After the tail kit I don't think I bothered with the Van's "instructions."I need to dig out the -6 plans and give him a "back in the day" story. I swear, you built the RV-6's wings in about 4 pages of text and probably 15 pages of dimensioned and orthogonal drawings. The real challenge was to make sure you assembled things in a sequence that didn't block you from doing something later in the build. 'Cause Van's didn't put most of that stuff in the plans - you had to look ahead and put some thought into it.
I quit griping about Van's plans when I bought Skybolt plans.T-18. Big roll of drawings. Some articles in Sport Aviation. Have fun.
The plans were pretty good if you could read drawings. If not, I guess you learned, quit, or ended up with yard art. The "Cliff's Notes" for building the RV-6 were "The Bunny's Guide", by Frank van der Hulst. Very helpful, as were a lot of build logs in those days. Van's didn't go into a lot of detail, but some builders did.Whole lotta RV's built using Randall Henderson's supplemental instructions and the Matronics RV-list. After the tail kit I don't think I bothered with the Van's "instructions."
OTOH, I thought the plans were pretty good for the most part. Hand drawn and lettered, of course, but clear and thorough enough to scratch-build from. You're spot on about the lack of sequencing, though.
Nauga,
the North Plains rambler
I need to dig out the -6 plans and give him a "back in the day" story. I swear, you built the RV-6's wings in about 4 pages of text and probably 15 pages of dimensioned and orthogonal drawings. The real challenge was to make sure you assembled things in a sequence that didn't block you from doing something later in the build. 'Cause Van's didn't put most of that stuff in the plans - you had to look ahead and put some thought into it.