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Stealth Pilot[_2_]
May 5th 08, 02:58 PM
The alternate wood I'm using has been australian queensland hoop pine.
I found the batch I had a bit brash (a timber term meaning brittle
short grained wood) so I was on the lookout for something a little
safer for use in my Turbulent. well for the structural bits anyway.

Australia's equivalent of Home Depot is Bunnings hardware. The stores
are layed out as an exact clone of the american stores, but that is
bye the bye. What I discovered in Bunnings one day was some extremely
knotted planks of some yellowish wood. between the bazillion (a huge
number) of knots was some amazingly fine grained timber. about 0ne
ring per millimeter. the wood felt quite reasonable for weight so I
bought a plank to experiment with. At this stage I had no idea what
the wood species was.

the stuff had a weedy smell when cut. it steamed easily and seemed to
glue with epoxy really well. I used the straight grained pieces for
the turtledeck bows of my first Turbulent fuselage.

I experiemented some more with the remaining wood and couldnt fault it
as a construction timber.

I had a brainwave one day and hunted out the receipt off the floor of
the car. alaskan yellow cedar was what the receipt called it.
I had visions of weedy little trees in wind swept tundra being raped
over by alaskan timber harvesters :-)

I discussed the need to test the wood to determin its strength with an
aero engineer friend. the next night he sent me the full design
strength specs for the wood.
having never heard of it before, this stunned me.

I did some google searching and discovered some truely interesting
facts regarding alaskan yellow cedar.

the weedy smell only occurs when the wood has a high moisture content.
when the wood is down at moisture contents suitable for aircraft use
the wood is odourless. what a useful property an indicator of useful
moisture content is.
Trees have been discovered in forests that have no insect or
microrganism attack even after standing as dead trunks for 150 years.
It turns out that alaskan yellow cedar is rated as the softwood most
inherently resistant to attack by bugs. another really useful
property.

I discovered an early aeroengineering text that gave comparitive
rundowns of alternative woods to the ubiquitous Spruce.
Alaskan yellow Cedar is rated as a highly shock absorbent/resistant
wood sutiable for the most arduous structural use, which is the very
opposite of brash timber.
the thing that floored me though was the reason why spruce was
selected as the wood of choice, it wasnt spruce's properties, it was
just that there appeared to me more millable timber available.

Alaskan yellow cedar, far from being a lower grade alternative wood to
spruce, is actually a better timber in a number of it's properties.

I was amazed. an alternative timber selected on a hunch turned out to
be a winner.
My second attempt D3 Turbulent is shaping up to be a pearler of an
aircraft in Alaskan Yellow Cedar and Qld Hoop Pine marine ply.

Dont knock some of those alternative timbers. Some mean that the
drying up of spruce is an artifact of history, not the end of timber
aircraft.
....which is good 'cause timber aircraft are wonderful building
experiences.

Stealth (not a single nail used in construction) Pilot

btw my rape picture turned out to be a vivid imagination. there are
huge stands of majestic alaskan yellow cedar all down the southern
coast. there are a lot of aircraft in those trees.

May 6th 08, 04:05 AM
On May 5, 7:58 am, Stealth Pilot >
wrote:
> The alternate wood I'm using has been australian queensland hoop pine.
> I found the batch I had a bit brash (a timber term meaning brittle
> short grained wood) so I was on the lookout for something a little
> safer for use in my Turbulent. well for the structural bits anyway.
>
> Australia's equivalent of Home Depot is Bunnings hardware. The stores
> are layed out as an exact clone of the american stores, but that is
> bye the bye. What I discovered in Bunnings one day was some extremely
> knotted planks of some yellowish wood. between the bazillion (a huge
> number) of knots was some amazingly fine grained timber. about 0ne
> ring per millimeter. the wood felt quite reasonable for weight so I
> bought a plank to experiment with. At this stage I had no idea what
> the wood species was.
>
> the stuff had a weedy smell when cut. it steamed easily and seemed to
> glue with epoxy really well. I used the straight grained pieces for
> the turtledeck bows of my first Turbulent fuselage.
>
> I experiemented some more with the remaining wood and couldnt fault it
> as a construction timber.
>
> I had a brainwave one day and hunted out the receipt off the floor of
> the car. alaskan yellow cedar was what the receipt called it.
> I had visions of weedy little trees in wind swept tundra being raped
> over by alaskan timber harvesters :-)
>
> I discussed the need to test the wood to determin its strength with an
> aero engineer friend. the next night he sent me the full design
> strength specs for the wood.
> having never heard of it before, this stunned me.
>
> I did some google searching and discovered some truely interesting
> facts regarding alaskan yellow cedar.
>
> the weedy smell only occurs when the wood has a high moisture content.
> when the wood is down at moisture contents suitable for aircraft use
> the wood is odourless. what a useful property an indicator of useful
> moisture content is.
> Trees have been discovered in forests that have no insect or
> microrganism attack even after standing as dead trunks for 150 years.
> It turns out that alaskan yellow cedar is rated as the softwood most
> inherently resistant to attack by bugs. another really useful
> property.
>
> I discovered an early aeroengineering text that gave comparitive
> rundowns of alternative woods to the ubiquitous Spruce.
> Alaskan yellow Cedar is rated as a highly shock absorbent/resistant
> wood sutiable for the most arduous structural use, which is the very
> opposite of brash timber.
> the thing that floored me though was the reason why spruce was
> selected as the wood of choice, it wasnt spruce's properties, it was
> just that there appeared to me more millable timber available.
>
> Alaskan yellow cedar, far from being a lower grade alternative wood to
> spruce, is actually a better timber in a number of it's properties.
>
> I was amazed. an alternative timber selected on a hunch turned out to
> be a winner.
> My second attempt D3 Turbulent is shaping up to be a pearler of an
> aircraft in Alaskan Yellow Cedar and Qld Hoop Pine marine ply.
>
> Dont knock some of those alternative timbers. Some mean that the
> drying up of spruce is an artifact of history, not the end of timber
> aircraft.
> ...which is good 'cause timber aircraft are wonderful building
> experiences.
>
> Stealth (not a single nail used in construction) Pilot
>
> btw my rape picture turned out to be a vivid imagination. there are
> huge stands of majestic alaskan yellow cedar all down the southern
> coast. there are a lot of aircraft in those trees.

I grew up in the Canadian province of British Columbia, right
next to Alaska. We used yellow cedar sometimes. Stuff stinks when you
cut it. There are other BC woods that are useable in aircraft, too,
like Engelmann Spruce (similar to Sitka Spruce but found in the drier
areas), Ponderosa Pine (though BC's pines have been decimated in the
recent Pine Beetle infestation) and Douglas Fir, which, while
technically a softwood, is considerably harder and stronger and
dimensions can be reduced 10% or so when using it in airplanes.
Reducing any dimension can upset hundreds of other dimensions, so most
people don't bother with it. It would still be heavier than Sitka
anyhow, even at 10% smaller. And it splits/splinters easily. Western
Red Cedar has been used in airplanes, too, but it's not so strong.
When I was in South Africa last fall the local homebuilders there were
using Eucalyptus, which they call Saligna once it's turned into
lumber. South Africa has huge plantations of this stuff. In the US a
few years ago I flew over big pine plantations in North Carolina.
Trouble with those is the rapid growth and therefore low ring count
per inch. The Americans also have Basswood and some different Cedars.

Dan

wright1902glider
May 7th 08, 05:18 PM
On May 5, 9:05*pm, wrote:
> On May 5, 7:58 am, Stealth Pilot >
> wrote:
> > Dont knock some of those alternative timbers. Some mean that the
> > drying up of spruce is an artifact of history, not the end of timber
> > aircraft.

If you follow the spruce specs back far enough, you eventually run
into "Them Wright Boys", and beyond that, Octave Chanute. I think the
reason they went with spruce back in the day was because it had the
highest strength-to-weight properties and it was available in the
local lumberyards in lengths exceeding 16 feet. Keeping in mind that
both Chanute and the Wrights were using eastern species of spruce,
what they referred to as "West Virginia Silver Spruce." Exactly which
species that is, I dunno. But its what they could get, it was light,
and it worked better than the alternatives like southern yellow pine.
A quick look back at the Wrights' notebooks tells us that thier 1904
machine was originally pine, but had a nasty habbit of shattering
parts when it crashed, uh, I mean landed. Broken parts were eventually
replaced with spruce.

Truth is that lots of things will work for building an airplane. Some
better than others. By what degree is often the determining factor.
But as resources deminish, alternatives look better.

Harry

cavelamb himself[_4_]
May 7th 08, 07:21 PM
wright1902glider wrote:
> On May 5, 9:05 pm, wrote:
>
>>On May 5, 7:58 am, Stealth Pilot >
>>wrote:
>>
>>>Dont knock some of those alternative timbers. Some mean that the
>>>drying up of spruce is an artifact of history, not the end of timber
>>>aircraft.
>
>
> If you follow the spruce specs back far enough, you eventually run
> into "Them Wright Boys", and beyond that, Octave Chanute. I think the
> reason they went with spruce back in the day was because it had the
> highest strength-to-weight properties and it was available in the
> local lumberyards in lengths exceeding 16 feet. Keeping in mind that
> both Chanute and the Wrights were using eastern species of spruce,
> what they referred to as "West Virginia Silver Spruce." Exactly which
> species that is, I dunno. But its what they could get, it was light,
> and it worked better than the alternatives like southern yellow pine.
> A quick look back at the Wrights' notebooks tells us that thier 1904
> machine was originally pine, but had a nasty habbit of shattering
> parts when it crashed, uh, I mean landed. Broken parts were eventually
> replaced with spruce.
>
> Truth is that lots of things will work for building an airplane. Some
> better than others. By what degree is often the determining factor.
> But as resources deminish, alternatives look better.
>
> Harry


What was it you used on your Flyer, Harry?

Richard
--
(remove the X to email)

Now just why the HELL do I have to press 1 for English?
John Wayne

wright1902glider
May 13th 08, 03:46 PM
On May 7, 12:21*pm, cavelamb himself > wrote:

> What was it you used on your Flyer, Harry?
>
> Richard


I used sitka spruce for most of it because that's the closest that I
could find to the Chanute specs and it was my best guess for an
alternate. Keeping in mind of course that only about 1/2 of a Wright
glider was spruce. The other 1/2 was white ash. Just about any part
with a bend in it - ribs, landing skids, wingtip bows, canard leading
& trailing edges, were either steam-bent ash, or were laminated from
ash. By the way, steam-bending is 90 times harder than it looks and
127 times more time-consuming.

Supposedly, Ken Hyde of "The Wright Experience" actually used West
Virginia silver spruce for his machines. Theyway I heard it, and this
is NOT a verified fact, he found someone with a tree, had it cut &
milled, etc. His wood did look a little different from mine, but that
have been from the finish his people used. "The Wright Experience" was
funded by Ford (yeah, that Ford), several other major corps., and
Harry Combs. SUPER DEEP pockets folks. They spent millions building
what cost me a few thousand.

Admittedly, I did have to interpret a few parts and materials for my
machine just because the original materials weren't available for less
than millions, or there simply wasn't any info. available for a
particular part. But I can document my plane to 95% accuracy.

Harry

Lou
May 13th 08, 09:22 PM
Try this, don't know if it's what your looking for or not.

http://www.fpl.fs.fed.us/documnts/fplgtr/fplgtr113/ch04.pdf

Lou

Darrel Toepfer
May 14th 08, 03:57 AM
wright1902glider > wrote:

> Supposedly, Ken Hyde of "The Wright Experience" actually used West
> Virginia silver spruce for his machines. Theyway I heard it, and this
> is NOT a verified fact, he found someone with a tree, had it cut &
> milled, etc. His wood did look a little different from mine, but that
> have been from the finish his people used. "The Wright Experience" was
> funded by Ford (yeah, that Ford), several other major corps., and
> Harry Combs. SUPER DEEP pockets folks. They spent millions building
> what cost me a few thousand.

They are building (built) everything from the kites to the 1911 model B and
then actually fly them:
http://ns97.webmasters.com/*wrightexperience.com/httpdocs/mission/index.htm

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