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#1
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Things are moving along.
1. My new tail-to-fuselage fairing has arrived, and my A&P has allowed as how we can use cherry pop rivets (rather than structural), which will save a bunch of headache. (Although Mary will still have to get back into the aft fuselage in order to vacuum up the rivets that fell into the plane when we cut the old ones off...so pictures will be forthcoming... ;-) Thanks for the suggestion! 2. We're still hunting down the source of a pesky oil leak that has driven me nuts over the last year. I pulled the prop off yesterday, under the suspicion that the seal right behind the prop might be the culprit. It wasn't. It looks like the oil might be coming out where the case halves come together, right behind that seal -- but it's sure hard to tell. So, we're retorqueing all the case through bolts again, and my A&P is going to apply some sealant (that he uses on the big jets at his "day" job) to that joint, in hopes of licking this incredibly aggravating problem. (I want the Japanese to come out with an airplane engine. I'll bet it wouldn't "mark its territory" like an old Harley, and maybe the competition would force Lycoming/Continental to figure out a better way to seal their engines....) 3. As long as the prop is off, I sanded the backside of the prop, and will be applying a nice, new coat of flat black prop paint to it. It was pretty badly scoured, and -- with the sun at our back -- was really getting annoying. 3. The new Ameri-King ELT arrived, which I'm suppose to be installing right now. Unfortunately, our lead housekeeper called in sick this morning, so Mary is out cleaning rooms, which means I'm covering the desk. (I've got other staff on vacation.) So I'm paying my A&P $65/hour instead of $8/hour for someone to cover the desk. Stupid, stupid, stupid. :-( Otherwise, no surprises...yet. -- Jay Honeck Iowa City, IA Pathfinder N56993 www.AlexisParkInn.com "Your Aviation Destination" |
#2
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("Jay Honeck" wrote)
So, we're retorqueing all the case through bolts again, and my A&P is going to apply some sealant (that he uses on the big jets at his "day" job) to that joint, in hopes of licking this incredibly aggravating problem. (I want the Japanese to come out with an airplane engine. I'll bet it wouldn't "mark its territory" like an old Harley, and maybe the competition would force Lycoming/Continental to figure out a better way to seal their engines....) 3. The new Ameri-King ELT arrived, which I'm suppose to be installing right now. Unfortunately, our lead housekeeper called in sick this morning, so Mary is out cleaning rooms, which means I'm covering the desk. (I've got other staff on vacation.) So I'm paying my A&P $65/hour instead of $8/hour for someone to cover the desk. Stupid, stupid, stupid. :-( #3. Joe or Becca, how'd you like to make $10 hr while Mom is cleaning rooms and I'm over at the airport? Call if you need us. Be nice to the guests ......"Do good work." :-) http://makeashorterlink.com/?A4C763BDC (Same link as below ...wait for it) RAH thread about ....thread. #50 silk thread to be exact. (Japanese silk? g) http://groups.google.com/group/rec.aviation.homebuilt/browse_thread/thread/009ae0fef5d88232/3a557cffb048493c?hl=en#3a557cffb048493c Montblack |
#3
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In article ,
"Montblack" wrote: #3. Joe or Becca, how'd you like to make $10 hr while Mom is cleaning rooms and I'm over at the airport? Call if you need us. Be nice to the guests ....."Do good work." :-) Response: Well, Dad, make it $20/hr. It's still saving you $45/hr. :-) |
#4
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Might it be practical to pressurize the crankcase thru the breather
line with a couple of psi of air & then use a soap solution to find the extent of the leak? You are probably going to have to clean the area with solvent anyway and then suck your mechanic's magic stuff into the joint with a vacuum pump. A silk thread was supposedly used on the initial assembly of the engine but there is no way you can "slightly" split the case now & get it to seal again with silk. Simply torqueing it won't work either. I don't think the Continental and Lycoming seal system is that bad. I've never had trouble sealing the case halves or the rear cover. It is important to apply the RTV (or whatever) very thin, but complete to the ends & with the silk thread. Good luck! |
#5
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Might it be practical to pressurize the crankcase thru the breather
line with a couple of psi of air & then use a soap solution to find the extent of the leak? You are probably going to have to clean the area with solvent anyway and then suck your mechanic's magic stuff into the joint with a vacuum pump. Well, supposedly this magic stuff just needs to be on a clean, dry surface -- no need for vacuum. I degreased the engine yesterday, let it dry overnight, and we applied the goop today. We'll see if it does anything. A silk thread was supposedly used on the initial assembly of the engine but there is no way you can "slightly" split the case now & get it to seal again with silk. Simply torqueing it won't work either. Yeah, I figured as much. If the goop doesn't work, I'm resigned to having a messy engine for the next 1100 hours or so... :-( -- Jay Honeck Iowa City, IA Pathfinder N56993 www.AlexisParkInn.com "Your Aviation Destination" |
#6
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On 03/25/06 13:22, real_name wrote:
In article , "Montblack" wrote: #3. Joe or Becca, how'd you like to make $10 hr while Mom is cleaning rooms and I'm over at the airport? Call if you need us. Be nice to the guests ....."Do good work." :-) Response: Well, Dad, make it $20/hr. It's still saving you $45/hr. No, no, no ... you *never* *ever* tell the child how much money they're saving you... ;-) -- Mark Hansen, PP-ASEL, Instrument Airplane Cal Aggie Flying Farmers Sacramento, CA |
#7
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![]() "Jay Honeck" wrote in message ups.com... Might it be practical to pressurize the crankcase thru the breather line with a couple of psi of air & then use a soap solution to find the extent of the leak? You are probably going to have to clean the area with solvent anyway and then suck your mechanic's magic stuff into the joint with a vacuum pump. Well, supposedly this magic stuff just needs to be on a clean, dry surface -- no need for vacuum. I degreased the engine yesterday, let it dry overnight, and we applied the goop today. We'll see if it does anything. What make and model of goop is it? My 0-320 has had a case seam leak since I built the thing, and I'd like to correct it. KB A silk thread was supposedly used on the initial assembly of the engine but there is no way you can "slightly" split the case now & get it to seal again with silk. Simply torqueing it won't work either. Yeah, I figured as much. If the goop doesn't work, I'm resigned to having a messy engine for the next 1100 hours or so... :-( -- Jay Honeck Iowa City, IA Pathfinder N56993 www.AlexisParkInn.com "Your Aviation Destination" |
#8
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Sorry, I don't buy it. No sealant will work without being sucked into the
void. IMHO, you are wasting your time with surface sealant. Talk your mech into letting you at least put the vacuum on the exhaust pipe and trying to suck some of the goop into the gap. Let it be "tossing coraiander over your shoulder to keep the rhinocerosus at bay" if that is what (s)he thinks. It is YOUR plane and YOU get to say what you think is correct. Jim "Jay Honeck" wrote in message ups.com... Might it be practical to pressurize the crankcase thru the breather line with a couple of psi of air & then use a soap solution to find the extent of the leak? You are probably going to have to clean the area with solvent anyway and then suck your mechanic's magic stuff into the joint with a vacuum pump. |
#9
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Sorry, I don't buy it. No sealant will work without being sucked into the
void. Well, I hear ya -- but every time I've questioned my A&P, I've been proven wrong. He's been building engines for 40 years, and if he says it might work, I'm willing to give it a shot. (He has allowed that it might not.) They've come a long ways with this kind of sealant stuff. We had a leak in a high-pressure hot water pipe that would have been a helluva thing to solder. It would have required ripping the ceiling down, cutting joists, the whole nine yards. Instead, the plumber put some kind of goop on the leaky joint that worked. I wouldn't have believed it if I hadn't seen it -- but it sets up like iron, even on the wet surface, and is water-tight. Dunno what this stuff is that my A&P is using, but as I said they use it on jets for fuel leaks. I'll let you know if it works. -- Jay Honeck Iowa City, IA Pathfinder N56993 www.AlexisParkInn.com "Your Aviation Destination" |
#10
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![]() "Jay Honeck" wrote in message oups.com... Dunno what this stuff is that my A&P is using, but as I said they use it on jets for fuel leaks. I'll let you know if it works. -- Jay Honeck Iowa City, IA Pathfinder N56993 www.AlexisParkInn.com "Your Aviation Destination" Sounds like ProSeal in one of it's many flavors.... |
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