Why would you believe that, since the seals are made of the same material as automotive brake seals ... ??
Jim
Give it a try and see what happens. Why do you believe the compounds are the same?
Why would you believe that, since the seals are made of the same material as automotive brake seals ... ??
Jim
Why would you believe that, since the seals are made of the same material as automotive brake seals ... ??
Why would you believe that, since the seals are made of the same material as automotive brake seals ... ??
Jim
Yeah, and all electricity is made out of the same stuff, too. That doesn't make it interchangeable.
Go ask anyone who maintains his own pre-1980 British car about brake seals and fluid.
Not to pick nits but electricity is interchangeable and that's why it's so easily distributed. We do it all the time mostly thanks to Nikola Tesla - transformers to change AC voltages and rectifiers/inverters to switch between AC and DC.
.....Yeah, and all electricity is made out of the same stuff, too. That doesn't make it interchangeable.
I came in here for a discussion, not to start a holy war, but that is about the dumbest analogy I've ever heard ... even from freshman history majors.
Go ask anyone who maintains his own pre-1980 British car about brake seals and fluid.
The discussion isn't Brit cars, it is airplanes and "normal" vehicles.
for 10 years, and was just hopping around while trying to start a new carrier.
Actually DOT 3, 4, and 5.1 are hygroscopic and the charts give both a wet and dry boiling point. Silicone based/DOT 5 are hydrophobic and do not absorb water.
Upon arrival I found the front cylinder directly behind the fuel pump (Continental C-85) stained blue from the 100 LL. The cork gasket on the top of the fuel pump was leaking and he had been flying the plane only calling me when the pump was sucking so much air that it wouldn't function at all.
Not to pick nits but electricity is interchangeable and that's why it's so easily distributed. We do it all the time mostly thanks to Nikola Tesla - transformers to change AC voltages and rectifiers/inverters to switch between AC and DC.
.....
Electricity is NOT interchangeable -- if it won't work in the form it arrives, you have to change it into another form.
BTW, the "dumbest analogy you ever heard" was on a poster that I saw at JPL . . .it wasn't posted by a freshman history major, it was posted by a guy who was tired of being told things like "just make it out of aluminum."
Okay, in small words, just for you:
There is no one material that brake seals are made out of, for cars or airplanes.
Different material has different reactions to different chemicals -- which any British car owner can tell you.
Just because it's "brake seal material" doesn't mean it's the same as any other brake seal material.
Just like electricity (try to stay with me here, Jim), to those unfamiliar with the differences, the different values may not be apparent. Just because something is right for one use doesn't mean that it's right for any other use. Electricity is electricity, brake seal material is brake seal material, metal is metal . . .but the details can be VERY important.
Got any real good helo ones?
The owner of an Ercoupe called me. The transfer pump that pumped fuel from the wing tanks to the header had been failing for quite some time. It now wouldn't pump at all and he didn't have enough fuel in the header tank to bring the plane to me. Would I come to his airport and fix it??
Upon arrival I found the front cylinder directly behind the fuel pump (Continental C-85) stained blue from the 100 LL. The cork gasket on the top of the fuel pump was leaking and he had been flying the plane only calling me when the pump was sucking so much air that it wouldn't function at all.
Think about what you just wrote, simpleton. If it isn't interchangeable, how can you change it into another form?
interchange === change. Think about it.
I'll bet you saw that when you were sweeping up the floor on your janitor shift, weren't you?
After all, it's possible to string 50 resistors together to match a particular value, but that string isn't necessarily interchangeable with R7 in one of your intercom kits.
Sure they will. My Monte Carlo analysis lets each component vary by p/m 20%, using 10% values with 5% tolerance in the product. I doubt you could get that string outside the 20% brackets if you tried.
One late night cruising down taxiway alpha in a fuel truck, I came upon a complete Ham Standard 4 bladed hydromatic propeller just lying on the taxiway.
.....The string wouldn't fit into the box.
I'll bet I could string together 47 1k 0602 SMD resistors and replace that 47k quarter watt in the same volume.
I helped a couple of guys build your kits. Sorry you got away from that.
Well, there is a long story that goes with that; suffice it to say that the obstacle to producing the kits has been removed. It was a rather expensive excavation, but well worth it. It should take us less than a year to rebuild to where it was.
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I don't know any of the story,
Could something like that (which was temporarily attached and used no wiring) be used on a Cessna without needing an STC or 337?
. . .and your first thought was "eBay" . . ?
The "story" had blonde hair and blue eyes. Enough?
In general, yes. Even if it is attached, 21.303 (b)(2) gives the owner of an aircraft the right to owner-produced parts, which includes avionics.
Remember the animated version of "The Jungle Book" . . ? Where Baloo (Phil Harris) tells Mowgli "Stay away from those things, they're nothin' but TROUBLE!"