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I noticed a recent discussion about materials used for the
construction of Sailplanes. I am looking for a material to help support a weak area on the cowl of an airplane that I fly. It is a power plane (has one of those fuel to noise converters) so please forgive. The cowl is wide and the center is starting to droop and crack. I am tring to find a material (honeycomb?) that is about 1/4 to 3/8th inch thick that I could glass in or use epoxy resin to stiffen the cowl. I am looking for something a bit more structural than layers of fibreglass. I would like for it to be light and thin enough that it does not distrub the airflow inside the cowl. I am looking for something in the range of 4 inches wide by 3 ft long to glass inside the cowl to help support it. It will need to be flexible enough to go around a few minor curves. Thanks in advance for any suggestions from folks that work with composite materials. Take Care Steve |
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In article , Steve B
writes I noticed a recent discussion about materials used for the construction of Sailplanes. I am looking for a material to help support a weak area on the cowl of an airplane that I fly. It is a power plane (has one of those fuel to noise converters) so please forgive. The cowl is wide and the center is starting to droop and crack. I am tring to find a material (honeycomb?) that is about 1/4 to 3/8th inch thick that I could glass in or use epoxy resin to stiffen the cowl. I am looking for something a bit more structural than layers of fibreglass. I would like for it to be light and thin enough that it does not distrub the airflow inside the cowl. I am looking for something in the range of 4 inches wide by 3 ft long to glass inside the cowl to help support it. It will need to be flexible enough to go around a few minor curves. Thanks in advance for any suggestions from folks that work with composite materials. Take Care Steve There is a material called FibreLam which was used to build the Edgerly sailplane. It's used in commercial aircraft construction for floors and panels. Try www.hexcelcomposites.com -- Mike Lindsay |
#3
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![]() "Mike Lindsay" wrote in message ... In article , Steve B writes The cowl is wide and the center is starting to droop and crack. I am tring to find a material (honeycomb?) that is about 1/4 to 3/8th inch thick that I could glass in or use epoxy resin to stiffen the cowl. Mike, surely anything you do to an original designed component would require approval? Can you just decide to 'change' the design of something without testing and certifying such a modification .. just wondering is all? fk'n |
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The simpliest way would be to take the cowling off
then sand the inside for a key for resin and cloth then make a tempory jig or support to hold the fairing in the required shape."Weigh the part before you sand, again when you have sanded and the final weight when you sanded and trimmed the fairing to final shape. This is for your weight and balance,verify with your engineer re the weight change NOTE CARBON PARTICLES ARE NOT HEALTHY FOR YOU, WEAR A MASK IF YOU DRY SAND OR BETTER YET WET SAND. Obtain 2 layers of 125 grade "Bi" directional Carbon cloth and lay them into the fairing with the second layer at 45degree weave orientation You need to check if a polyester or an epoxy has been used for the original fairing resin and match type. This should make the fairing around 1-2 mil thicker, check clearances when reinstalling. This should stiffen the fairing considerably . Gary "Steve B" wrote in message ... I noticed a recent discussion about materials used for the construction of Sailplanes. I am looking for a material to help support a weak area on the cowl of an airplane that I fly. It is a power plane (has one of those fuel to noise converters) so please forgive. The cowl is wide and the center is starting to droop and crack. I am tring to find a material (honeycomb?) that is about 1/4 to 3/8th inch thick that I could glass in or use epoxy resin to stiffen the cowl. I am looking for something a bit more structural than layers of fibreglass. I would like for it to be light and thin enough that it does not distrub the airflow inside the cowl. I am looking for something in the range of 4 inches wide by 3 ft long to glass inside the cowl to help support it. It will need to be flexible enough to go around a few minor curves. Thanks in advance for any suggestions from folks that work with composite materials. Take Care Steve |
#5
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Steve B wrote in message . ..
The cowl is wide and the center is starting to droop and crack. I am tring to find a material (honeycomb?) that is about 1/4 to 3/8th inch thick that I could glass in or use epoxy resin to stiffen the cowl. Take Care Steve If you're looking for stiffness look at some high density foam, or even plain old Balsa as a core material. 1/4" of that and 2 layers of 8 oz "E" glass should provide all the stiffness you need - IMHO ================== Leon McAtee |
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