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#1
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Remember the crack in the engine mount that failed and brought down the airliner? How about the B-52 that taxied onto the runway, applied full power and the left wing fell off! This all started as a crack near the spar after an air-refuling mishap. Would you fly a wood sailplane with cracks in th skin? No way, don't walk, run away from that puppy! Would you fly an aluminum ship with cracks in the skin? That old girls been rode hard and put away wet, right? Fear of cracks is in our DNA. Remember; Step on a crack and break your mothers back?
So now you find a crack in the skin of your fiberglass sailplane. Bad news, right? Actually no. Fiberglass sailplanes are covered with a thin layer of rock-hard gelcoat that was placed over a flexible structure. I remember the DG-400 at Minden, that had been flown extensively in wave conditions. It was literally covered with cracks. The wings had cord-wise cracks every half inch on both sides of both wings. This ship was flying regularly and was considered airworthy. Yeah, but I got a crack coming from the corner of my spoiler box, is my wing going to fall off? Nope, when your wing skin was laid up in its mold, the fiberglass cloth wouldn't fit tightly into the corners and around the edges of your spoiler box, so filler and extra gelcoat was applied all around the spoiler box to allow the cloth to smoothly overlap the box. The corners of the box are stress concentration points and cracks will quite likely appear there. How deep do these cracks go? All the way through the gelcoat and filler, but they stop when they reach the fiberglass cloth because they are gelcoat cracks migrating IN from the rock-hard coating, NOT cracks in the fiberglass migrating OUT! Once again, this is just my humble opinion, but it was formed after 40 years of grinding out your cracks and finding no structural issues. :) JJ |
#2
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Following up on this...
From the few times I've been involved in refinishing projects, I've noticed that really bad gelcoat crazing from "normal" exposure and use/neglect (i..e. not wave flights) eventually makes its way down into the glass layer. A Grob Twin that I lead the refinish on had large areas of deep crazing, to the point where the bond between gelcoat and glass was failing (i.e chunks of gelcoat were falling off). We ground all the old gelcoat off, but what we were left with was areas where little "rivers" of epoxy had begun to chip or flake out of the glass matching the deepest gelcoat cracks. However, even under strong magnification, all you can see is that a few microns worth of epoxy is gone, but there is no evidence whatsoever of these cracks propagating further down into the matrix. Refinishing with the usual methods (Polyprimer and PPG Concept Urethane) produced a gorgeous, smooth surface. So, JJ, my question is, have you ever felt the need to do anything "extreme" in cases where gelcoat has been badly neglected. For example, a two seater left out in the weather for years with failed gelcoat? I've heard tales of people "peeling" the outermost layer of glass and laying up a new one. Seems like a lot of work for a non-problem... On Sunday, July 1, 2012 10:23:38 AM UTC-4, JJ Sinclair wrote: Remember the crack in the engine mount that failed and brought down the airliner? How about the B-52 that taxied onto the runway, applied full power and the left wing fell off! This all started as a crack near the spar after an air-refuling mishap. Would you fly a wood sailplane with cracks in th skin? No way, don't walk, run away from that puppy! Would you fly an aluminum ship with cracks in the skin? That old girls been rode hard and put away wet, right? Fear of cracks is in our DNA. Remember; Step on a crack and break your mothers back? So now you find a crack in the skin of your fiberglass sailplane. Bad news, right? Actually no. Fiberglass sailplanes are covered with a thin layer of rock-hard gelcoat that was placed over a flexible structure. I remember the DG-400 at Minden, that had been flown extensively in wave conditions. It was literally covered with cracks. The wings had cord-wise cracks every half inch on both sides of both wings. This ship was flying regularly and was considered airworthy. Yeah, but I got a crack coming from the corner of my spoiler box, is my wing going to fall off? Nope, when your wing skin was laid up in its mold, the fiberglass cloth wouldn't fit tightly into the corners and around the edges of your spoiler box, so filler and extra gelcoat was applied all around the spoiler box to allow the cloth to smoothly overlap the box. The corners of the box are stress concentration points and cracks will quite likely appear there. How deep do these cracks go? All the way through the gelcoat and filler, but they stop when they reach the fiberglass cloth because they are gelcoat cracks migrating IN from the rock-hard coating, NOT cracks in the fiberglass migrating OUT! Once again, this is just my humble opinion, but it was formed after 40 years of grinding out your cracks and finding no structural issues. :) JJ |
#3
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On Sunday, July 1, 2012 7:23:38 AM UTC-7, JJ Sinclair wrote:
Remember the crack in the engine mount that failed and brought down the airliner? How about the B-52 that taxied onto the runway, applied full power and the left wing fell off! This all started as a crack near the spar after an air-refuling mishap. Would you fly a wood sailplane with cracks in th skin? No way, don't walk, run away from that puppy! Would you fly an aluminum ship with cracks in the skin? That old girls been rode hard and put away wet, right? Fear of cracks is in our DNA. Remember; Step on a crack and break your mothers back? So now you find a crack in the skin of your fiberglass sailplane. Bad news, right? Actually no. Fiberglass sailplanes are covered with a thin layer of rock-hard gelcoat that was placed over a flexible structure. I remember the DG-400 at Minden, that had been flown extensively in wave conditions. It was literally covered with cracks. The wings had cord-wise cracks every half inch on both sides of both wings. This ship was flying regularly and was considered airworthy. Yeah, but I got a crack coming from the corner of my spoiler box, is my wing going to fall off? Nope, when your wing skin was laid up in its mold, the fiberglass cloth wouldn't fit tightly into the corners and around the edges of your spoiler box, so filler and extra gelcoat was applied all around the spoiler box to allow the cloth to smoothly overlap the box. The corners of the box are stress concentration points and cracks will quite likely appear there. How deep do these cracks go? All the way through the gelcoat and filler, but they stop when they reach the fiberglass cloth because they are gelcoat cracks migrating IN from the rock-hard coating, NOT cracks in the fiberglass migrating OUT! Once again, this is just my humble opinion, but it was formed after 40 years of grinding out your cracks and finding no structural issues. :) JJ Hi Papa3, I have seen the condition you discribe where the epoxy was starting to oxidise, I brushed on a new coat of epoxy over these areas and then proceded with the re-finish. Cheers, JJ |
#4
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On 7/1/2012 8:23 AM, JJ Sinclair wrote:
Remember the crack in the engine mount that failed and brought down the airliner? How about the B-52 that taxied onto the runway, applied full power and the left wing fell off! This all started as a crack near the spar after an air-refuling mishap. Would you fly a wood sailplane with cracks in th skin? No way, don't walk, run away from that puppy! Would you fly an aluminum ship with cracks in the skin? That old girls been rode hard and put away wet, right? Fear of cracks is in our DNA. Remember; Step on a crack and break your mothers back? So now you find a crack in the skin of your fiberglass sailplane. Bad news, right? Actually no. Fiberglass sailplanes are covered with a thin layer of rock-hard gelcoat that was placed over a flexible structure. I remember the DG-400 at Minden, that had been flown extensively in wave conditions. It was literally covered with cracks. The wings had cord-wise cracks every half inch on both sides of both wings. This ship was flying regularly and was considered airworthy. Yeah, but I got a crack coming from the corner of my spoiler box, is my wing going to fall off? Nope, when your wing skin was laid up in its mold, the fiberglass cloth wouldn't fit tightly into the corners and around the edges of your spoiler box, so filler and extra gelcoat was applied all around the spoiler box to allow the cloth to smoothly overlap the box. The corners of the box are stress concentration points and cracks will quite likely appear there. How deep do these cracks go? All the way through the gelcoat and filler, but they stop when they reach the fiberglass cloth because they are gelcoat cracks migrating IN from the rock-hard coating, NOT cracks in the fiberglass migrating OUT! Once again, this is just my humble opinion, but it was formed after 40 years of grinding out your cracks and finding no structural issues. :) JJ Thanks for bringing your "street cred" to this arena, and, for having the intestinal fortitude offer an empirical, repair-based opinion, JJ! Even if it gores FUD-based oxen... FUD = Fear Uncertainty Doubt My own aerospace-engineering-degreed opinion/conclusion mirrors yours. (FULL DISCLOSU 1) I never made my living in the airplane structural-analysis field; 2) the following discussion assumes "first generation glass" ships, simply because they're the "floppiest" of the composite birds, due to the relative lack of stiffness of glider-specific, structural fiberglass compared to carbon. What follows blends critical-thinking and empirical observation, underlain by a reasonably decent engineering understanding of the materials involved and typical physical properties. It is a GENERAL discussion. The devil is always in the details. YMMV, of course...) There are LOTS of 1st-generation, non-carbon-reinforced, gliders out there in used glider land. Likely, most have experienced gel-coat cracking at various times in their lives, regardless of whether they originally arrived with "the good gelcoat" or "the less-good gelcoat." Probably, by now, most have had gelcoat cracks at some time in their lives. The key element - as JJ noted - is the underlying structure is MUCH more flexible than is any sprayed-in-mold gelcoat. Think chocolate-coated vinyl bar stock. Yeah, it's an awful analogy, but you get the idea...what's underneath will bend - without breaking - far beyond what unmelted chocolate will withstand in its crack-free state. Want another analogy? Think plastic paint stirring stick. How do you clean 'em once paint on 'em has dried? If you're lazy like me, you simply bend 'em back and forth to crack the paint film, then peel. I've never yet broken a plastic paint stirrer. Gelcoat (or paint or any other coating atop the glider's structure) is present for essentially 3 reasons: 1) aerodynamics (maximizing laminar flow runs requires a smooth surface); 2) looks (few people would purchase an un-coated composite glider even if it was the laminar equal of competitors, because to most eyeballs, uncoated would look "unpretty"); and 3) UV protection (UV degrades essentially everything!). Rank 'em in whatever order is important to you... In a nutshell, there tends to be two schools of thought concerning gel-coat cracks. One tends to be FUD-based, one does not. If cracks per-se concern you, then limit your future-ownership-searches only to ships in pristine, uncracked condition. Be prepared to pay accordingly. If you're comfortable with input such as JJ's and the thought process underlying posts as this, your selection will be considerably larger, the asking-price range considerably less exotic, and ship performance little-degraded, in sport XC terms. Dick Johnson had a saying: "Air has fingers, but no eyes." He meant exterior looks were unimportant viz-a-viz surface smoothness, when considering ONLY laminar flow. He also very kindly measured clean and "buggy" performance numbers for just about every 1st-generation ship you might find for sale out there. Number freaks - and many wannabee-XC pilots - obsess over the differences; for all practical purposes few weekend sport pilots will ever have the ability to detect 'em. *Discussing* numerical performance differences is great fun, but of little real-world effect on one's ability to go XC and have huge amounts of fun doing so. Summarizing - the preceding mostly addresses issues arising from the relative stiffnesses of 1st-generation-glass glider *structure* vs. that structure's protective coating. - - - - - - What follows seeks to address two concerns - oft expressed - implying: 1) a direct causal possibility that gel-coat cracks propagate directly INTO the fiberglass, and 2) crack-enabled UV degradation is imminently life-threatening to Joe PIC. Some things to bear in mind: 1) ALL the structural fiberglass is 100% encased within the resin matrix; 2) any NON-structural fiberglass is similarly encased; 3)I've yet to hear a plausible theory for how a gelcoat crack can propagate across the interface into the underlying (relatively soft/non-brittle) resin substrate; 4) "all-fiberglass" composite ships don't routinely suffer from fractured wings, regardless of gelcoat condition; 5) cracks that don't propagate into the substrate will not allow any UV to propagate either; 6) 1st-generation glass ships are designed to stiffness criteria, not strength criteria. That last is significant to the extent that 1st-generation composite glider wings are considerably stronger than they need to be in a pure G-load sense, simply because were they not, no one would buy the ships because their (flutter-limited) Vne would be ridiculously/unusably low. I suspect somewhere on YouTube is a video clip or two of German flutter tests of gliders. Even to paid test pilots, the footage is impressive! But back to "propagating cracks" and "the UV concern"... Propagating cracks - Ask any experienced glider repairman how many crack situations they've seen that they believed to have propagated DOWN/into the structure from the gelcoat, as distinct from the other direction. If I read JJ correctly, his answer appears to be "Zero." When I asked another well-known western glider repairman the same question, his answer was, "Zero." Further he knew of zero gliders relegated to the scrap heap from UV degradation...as distinct from "refinish cost/relative value" considerations. His glider build/repair experience then spanned nearly 3 decades. My conclusion is the cracks you need to worry about do NOT come from routine assembly/flight loads. I know "UH" sometimes is on RAS, and would welcome him sharing his experience in this matter. UV - Pretend you know of a 1st-generation glass ship missing "huge areas" of gelcoat atop both wings...meaning, UV CAN directly access the structure. In time (years? decades? testing definitely required...) the structure would degrade to where strength reduction would become measurably detectable. That said, I've never seen such a "structure-exposed" ship since first setting eyes on a composite sailplane in 1972. If you happen to know of or own such a ship, simply spraying a UV barrier would eliminate the UV issue (though the ship would still look cruddy and pay an aerodynamic penalty from surface roughness). My conclusion is "the UV concern" is in fact a non-issue with the slightest application of common sense. - - - - - - My bottom line? If it's good for your soul, limit yourself to, and do your best to propagate, crack-free gliders. They ARE beautiful!!! Meanwhile, take care of any glider you're responsible for to the best of your ability...but don't lose sleep over gelcoat cracks you know are not directly due to a structural overstress condition. - - - - - - Anecdotal tale... Back in the early '90's my Club had a G-103A not get signed off for an annual because the (unfamiliar with glass gliders) A&P "got nervous about all the wing cracks." And there were LOTS of them. The small-radii leading edges had beaucoup spanwise cracks from root to tip, and, from nose to several inches back, on top and bottom. Both spoiler boxes had at each corner long cracks radiating well over a foot in length. The remainder of the top surfaces had various long, random, straight-to-arcing chordwise cracks bunched in various spanwise locations. Both bottom surfaces, from root to nearly tip, had closely spaced, mostly straight, chordwise cracks from nearly the leading edge to nearly the trailing edge. JJ explains above why spoiler box corners typically radiate cracks. The differences between top and bottom surface chordwise cracks were likely due to the undersurface being mostly in tension vs. compression for the top gelcoat. The leading edge cracks were likely a result of gelcoat and filler being thicker in that region. The shop quoted $12K for partial gelcoat-removal/inspect/refinish of the wings. By the time Club-labor sanded-to-inspection-depth the entire surfaces of both wings (unsurprisingly, no "into-resin-cracks" found, anywhere), shot on requisite, thin, pin-hole filling polyester "stuff" (I've forgotten what it was, and we later sold that ship for one with a higher payload, despite it getting slightly lighter due to our work), and had an auto body shop shoot both wings with polyurethane, we had less than $4K into the refinish. Looked great. Flew the same. Nary a crack ever showed through the polyurethane. Again, YMMV. Written from the perspective of someone who believes information trumps FUD... Bob W. |
#5
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WOW...looks like Bob is still working on that novel. Bob??? are you in prison? I'm thinking 'pet mouse'.
LOL dude, you sho no a lot of wods. R |
#6
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One of the best, most informative and authorative threads
I have read; reassuring! John F An old, no longer bold pilot. (PIK 20E) At 23:21 01 July 2012, BobW wrote: On 7/1/2012 8:23 AM, JJ Sinclair wrote: Remember the crack in the engine mount that failed and brought down the airliner? How about the B-52 that taxied onto the runway, applied full power and the left wing fell off! This all started as a crack near the spar after an air-refuling mishap. Would you fly a wood sailplane with cracks in th skin? No way, don't walk, run away from that puppy! Would you fly an aluminum ship with cracks in the skin? That old girls been rode hard and put away wet, right? Fear of cracks is in our DNA. Remember; Step on a crack and break your mothers back? So now you find a crack in the skin of your fiberglass sailplane. Bad news, right? Actually no. Fiberglass sailplanes are covered with a thin layer of rock-hard gelcoat that was placed over a flexible structure. I remember the DG-400 at Minden, that had been flown extensively in wave conditions. It was literally covered with cracks. The wings had cord-wise cracks every half inch on both sides of both wings. This ship was flying regularly and was considered airworthy. Yeah, but I got a crack coming from the corner of my spoiler box, is my wing going to fall off? Nope, when your wing skin was laid up in its mold, the fiberglass cloth wouldn't fit tightly into the corners and around the edges of your spoiler box, so filler and extra gelcoat was applied all around the spoiler box to allow the cloth to smoothly overlap the box. The corners of the box are stress concentration points and cracks will quite likely appear there. How deep do these cracks go? All the way through the gelcoat and filler, but they stop when they reach the fiberglass cloth because they are gelcoat cracks migrating IN from the rock-hard coating, NOT cracks in the fiberglass migrating OUT! Once again, this is just my humble opinion, but it was formed after 40 years of grinding out your cracks and finding no structural issues. :) JJ Thanks for bringing your "street cred" to this arena, and, for having the intestinal fortitude offer an empirical, repair-based opinion, JJ! Even if it gores FUD-based oxen... FUD = Fear Uncertainty Doubt My own aerospace-engineering-degreed opinion/conclusion mirrors yours. (FULL DISCLOSU 1) I never made my living in the airplane structural-analysis field; 2) the following discussion assumes "first generation glass" ships, simply because they're the "floppiest" of the composite birds, due to the relative lack of stiffness of glider-specific, structural fiberglass compared to carbon. What follows blends critical-thinking and empirical observation, underlain by a reasonably decent engineering understanding of the materials involved and typical physical properties. It is a GENERAL discussion. The devil is always in the details. YMMV, of course...) There are LOTS of 1st-generation, non-carbon-reinforced, gliders out there in used glider land. Likely, most have experienced gel-coat cracking at various times in their lives, regardless of whether they originally arrived with "the good gelcoat" or "the less-good gelcoat." Probably, by now, most have had gelcoat cracks at some time in their lives. The key element - as JJ noted - is the underlying structure is MUCH more flexible than is any sprayed-in-mold gelcoat. Think chocolate-coated vinyl bar stock. Yeah, it's an awful analogy, but you get the idea...what's underneath will bend - without breaking - far beyond what unmelted chocolate will withstand in its crack-free state. Want another analogy? Think plastic paint stirring stick. How do you clean 'em once paint on 'em has dried? If you're lazy like me, you simply bend 'em back and forth to crack the paint film, then peel. I've never yet broken a plastic paint stirrer. Gelcoat (or paint or any other coating atop the glider's structure) is present for essentially 3 reasons: 1) aerodynamics (maximizing laminar flow runs requires a smooth surface); 2) looks (few people would purchase an un-coated composite glider even if it was the laminar equal of competitors, because to most eyeballs, uncoated would look "unpretty"); and 3) UV protection (UV degrades essentially everything!). Rank 'em in whatever order is important to you... In a nutshell, there tends to be two schools of thought concerning gel-coat cracks. One tends to be FUD-based, one does not. If cracks per-se concern you, then limit your future-ownership-searches only to ships in pristine, uncracked condition. Be prepared to pay accordingly. If you're comfortable with input such as JJ's and the thought process underlying posts as this, your selection will be considerably larger, the asking-price range considerably less exotic, and ship performance little-degraded, in sport XC terms. Dick Johnson had a saying: "Air has fingers, but no eyes." He meant exterior looks were unimportant viz-a-viz surface smoothness, when considering ONLY laminar flow. He also very kindly measured clean and "buggy" performance numbers for just about every 1st-generation ship you might find for sale out there. Number freaks - and many wannabee-XC pilots - obsess over the differences; for all practical purposes few weekend sport pilots will ever have the ability to detect 'em. *Discussing* numerical performance differences is great fun, but of little real-world effect on one's ability to go XC and have huge amounts of fun doing so. Summarizing - the preceding mostly addresses issues arising from the relative stiffnesses of 1st-generation-glass glider *structure* vs. that structure's protective coating. - - - - - - What follows seeks to address two concerns - oft expressed - implying: 1) a direct causal possibility that gel-coat cracks propagate directly INTO the fiberglass, and 2) crack-enabled UV degradation is imminently life-threatening to Joe PIC. Some things to bear in mind: 1) ALL the structural fiberglass is 100% encased within the resin matrix; 2) any NON-structural fiberglass is similarly encased; 3)I've yet to hear a plausible theory for how a gelcoat crack can propagate across the interface into the underlying (relatively soft/non-brittle) resin substrate; 4) "all-fiberglass" composite ships don't routinely suffer from fractured wings, regardless of gelcoat condition; 5) cracks that don't propagate into the substrate will not allow any UV to propagate either; 6) 1st-generation glass ships are designed to stiffness criteria, not strength criteria. That last is significant to the extent that 1st-generation composite glider wings are considerably stronger than they need to be in a pure G-load sense, simply because were they not, no one would buy the ships because their (flutter-limited) Vne would be ridiculously/unusably low. I suspect somewhere on YouTube is a video clip or two of German flutter tests of gliders. Even to paid test pilots, the footage is impressive! But back to "propagating cracks" and "the UV concern"... Propagating cracks - Ask any experienced glider repairman how many crack situations they've seen that they believed to have propagated DOWN/into the structure from the gelcoat, as distinct from the other direction. If I read JJ correctly, his answer appears to be "Zero." When I asked another well-known western glider repairman the same question, his answer was, "Zero." Further he knew of zero gliders relegated to the scrap heap from UV degradation...as distinct from "refinish cost/relative value" considerations. His glider build/repair experience then spanned nearly 3 decades. My conclusion is the cracks you need to worry about do NOT come from routine assembly/flight loads. I know "UH" sometimes is on RAS, and would welcome him sharing his experience in this matter. UV - Pretend you know of a 1st-generation glass ship missing "huge areas" of gelcoat atop both wings...meaning, UV CAN directly access the structure. In time (years? decades? testing definitely required...) the structure would degrade to where strength reduction would become measurably detectable. That said, I've never seen such a "structure-exposed" ship since first setting eyes on a composite sailplane in 1972. If you happen to know of or own such a ship, simply spraying a UV barrier would eliminate the UV issue (though the ship would still look cruddy and pay an aerodynamic penalty from surface roughness). My conclusion is "the UV concern" is in fact a non-issue with the slightest application of common sense. - - - - - - My bottom line? If it's good for your soul, limit yourself to, and do your best to propagate, crack-free gliders. They ARE beautiful!!! Meanwhile, take care of any glider you're responsible for to the best of your ability...but don't lose sleep over gelcoat cracks you know are not directly due to a structural overstress condition. - - - - - - Anecdotal tale... Back in the early '90's my Club had a G-103A not get signed off for an annual because the (unfamiliar with glass gliders) A&P "got nervous about all the wing cracks." And there were LOTS of them. The small-radii leading edges had beaucoup spanwise cracks from root to tip, and, from nose to several inches back, on top and bottom. Both spoiler boxes had at each corner long cracks radiating well over a foot in length. The remainder of the top surfaces had various long, random, straight-to-arcing chordwise cracks bunched in various spanwise locations. Both bottom surfaces, from root to nearly tip, had closely spaced, mostly straight, chordwise cracks from nearly the leading edge to nearly the trailing edge. JJ explains above why spoiler box corners typically radiate cracks. The differences between top and bottom surface chordwise cracks were likely due to the undersurface being mostly in tension vs. compression for the top gelcoat. The leading edge cracks were likely a result of gelcoat and filler being thicker in that region. The shop quoted $12K for partial gelcoat-removal/inspect/refinish of the wings. By the time Club-labor sanded-to-inspection-depth the entire surfaces of both wings (unsurprisingly, no "into-resin-cracks" found, anywhere), shot on requisite, thin, pin-hole filling polyester "stuff" (I've forgotten what it was, and we later sold that ship for one with a higher payload, despite it getting slightly lighter due to our work), and had an auto body shop shoot both wings with polyurethane, we had less than $4K into the refinish. Looked great. Flew the same. Nary a crack ever showed through the polyurethane. Again, YMMV. Written from the perspective of someone who believes information trumps FUD... Bob W. |
#7
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It appears that a major cause of cracks in gelcoat is the difference in the
expansion coefficient of polyester gel and epoxy resin/glass. For this reason my club discourages the practice of taking a glider into air which has a temperature of less than -20 deg C. Giving the airframe a cold soak and then returning it to warmer air quicly will cause substantial cracks but only in the gel. Having said that the gelcoat used on the Slingsby Kestrel did not seem as baddly effected as many other gliders. Probably the worst culprit is the Grob 102/3 At 11:18 02 July 2012, John Firth wrote: One of the best, most informative and authorative threads I have read; reassuring! John F An old, no longer bold pilot. (PIK 20E) At 23:21 01 July 2012, BobW wrote: On 7/1/2012 8:23 AM, JJ Sinclair wrote: Remember the crack in the engine mount that failed and brought down the airliner? How about the B-52 that taxied onto the runway, applied full power and the left wing fell off! This all started as a crack near the spar after an air-refuling mishap. Would you fly a wood sailplane with cracks in th skin? No way, don't walk, run away from that puppy! Would you fly an aluminum ship with cracks in the skin? That old girls been rode hard and put away wet, right? Fear of cracks is in our DNA. Remember; Step on a crack and break your mothers back? So now you find a crack in the skin of your fiberglass sailplane. Bad news, right? Actually no. Fiberglass sailplanes are covered with a thin layer of rock-hard gelcoat that was placed over a flexible structure. I remember the DG-400 at Minden, that had been flown extensively in wave conditions. It was literally covered with cracks. The wings had cord-wise cracks every half inch on both sides of both wings. This ship was flying regularly and was considered airworthy. Yeah, but I got a crack coming from the corner of my spoiler box, is my wing going to fall off? Nope, when your wing skin was laid up in its mold, the fiberglass cloth wouldn't fit tightly into the corners and around the edges of your spoiler box, so filler and extra gelcoat was applied all around the spoiler box to allow the cloth to smoothly overlap the box. The corners of the box are stress concentration points and cracks will quite likely appear there. How deep do these cracks go? All the way through the gelcoat and filler, but they stop when they reach the fiberglass cloth because they are gelcoat cracks migrating IN from the rock-hard coating, NOT cracks in the fiberglass migrating OUT! Once again, this is just my humble opinion, but it was formed after 40 years of grinding out your cracks and finding no structural issues. :) JJ Thanks for bringing your "street cred" to this arena, and, for having the intestinal fortitude offer an empirical, repair-based opinion, JJ! Even if it gores FUD-based oxen... FUD = Fear Uncertainty Doubt My own aerospace-engineering-degreed opinion/conclusion mirrors yours. (FULL DISCLOSU 1) I never made my living in the airplane structural-analysis field; 2) the following discussion assumes "first generation glass" ships, simply because they're the "floppiest" of the composite birds, due to the relative lack of stiffness of glider-specific, structural fiberglass compared to carbon. What follows blends critical-thinking and empirical observation, underlain by a reasonably decent engineering understanding of the materials involved and typical physical properties. It is a GENERAL discussion. The devil is always in the details. YMMV, of course...) There are LOTS of 1st-generation, non-carbon-reinforced, gliders out there in used glider land. Likely, most have experienced gel-coat cracking at various times in their lives, regardless of whether they originally arrived with "the good gelcoat" or "the less-good gelcoat." Probably, by now, most have had gelcoat cracks at some time in their lives. The key element - as JJ noted - is the underlying structure is MUCH more flexible than is any sprayed-in-mold gelcoat. Think chocolate-coated vinyl bar stock. Yeah, it's an awful analogy, but you get the idea...what's underneath will bend - without breaking - far beyond what unmelted chocolate will withstand in its crack-free state. Want another analogy? Think plastic paint stirring stick. How do you clean 'em once paint on 'em has dried? If you're lazy like me, you simply bend 'em back and forth to crack the paint film, then peel. I've never yet broken a plastic paint stirrer. Gelcoat (or paint or any other coating atop the glider's structure) is present for essentially 3 reasons: 1) aerodynamics (maximizing laminar flow runs requires a smooth surface); 2) looks (few people would purchase an un-coated composite glider even if it was the laminar equal of competitors, because to most eyeballs, uncoated would look "unpretty"); and 3) UV protection (UV degrades essentially everything!). Rank 'em in whatever order is important to you... In a nutshell, there tends to be two schools of thought concerning gel-coat cracks. One tends to be FUD-based, one does not. If cracks per-se concern you, then limit your future-ownership-searches only to ships in pristine, uncracked condition. Be prepared to pay accordingly. If you're comfortable with input such as JJ's and the thought process underlying posts as this, your selection will be considerably larger, the asking-price range considerably less exotic, and ship performance little-degraded, in sport XC terms. Dick Johnson had a saying: "Air has fingers, but no eyes." He meant exterior looks were unimportant viz-a-viz surface smoothness, when considering ONLY laminar flow. He also very kindly measured clean and "buggy" performance numbers for just about every 1st-generation ship you might find for sale out there. Number freaks - and many wannabee-XC pilots - obsess over the differences; for all practical purposes few weekend sport pilots will ever have the ability to detect 'em. *Discussing* numerical performance differences is great fun, but of little real-world effect on one's ability to go XC and have huge amounts of fun doing so. Summarizing - the preceding mostly addresses issues arising from the relative stiffnesses of 1st-generation-glass glider *structure* vs. that structure's protective coating. - - - - - - What follows seeks to address two concerns - oft expressed - implying: 1) a direct causal possibility that gel-coat cracks propagate directly INTO the fiberglass, and 2) crack-enabled UV degradation is imminently life-threatening to Joe PIC. Some things to bear in mind: 1) ALL the structural fiberglass is 100% encased within the resin matrix; 2) any NON-structural fiberglass is similarly encased; 3)I've yet to hear a plausible theory for how a gelcoat crack can propagate across the interface into the underlying (relatively soft/non-brittle) resin substrate; 4) "all-fiberglass" composite ships don't routinely suffer from fractured wings, regardless of gelcoat condition; 5) cracks that don't propagate into the substrate will not allow any UV to propagate either; 6) 1st-generation glass ships are designed to stiffness criteria, not strength criteria. That last is significant to the extent that 1st-generation composite glider wings are considerably stronger than they need to be in a pure G-load sense, simply because were they not, no one would buy the ships because their (flutter-limited) Vne would be ridiculously/unusably low. I suspect somewhere on YouTube is a video clip or two of German flutter tests of gliders. Even to paid test pilots, the footage is impressive! But back to "propagating cracks" and "the UV concern"... Propagating cracks - Ask any experienced glider repairman how many crack situations they've seen that they believed to have propagated DOWN/into the structure from the gelcoat, as distinct from the other direction. If I read JJ correctly, his answer appears to be "Zero." When I asked another well-known western glider repairman the same question, his answer was, "Zero." Further he knew of zero gliders relegated to the scrap heap from UV degradation...as distinct from "refinish cost/relative value" considerations. His glider build/repair experience then spanned nearly 3 decades. My conclusion is the cracks you need to worry about do NOT come from routine assembly/flight loads. I know "UH" sometimes is on RAS, and would welcome him sharing his experience in this matter. UV - Pretend you know of a 1st-generation glass ship missing "huge areas" of gelcoat atop both wings...meaning, UV CAN directly access the structure. In time (years? decades? testing definitely required...) the structure would degrade to where strength reduction would become measurably detectable. That said, I've never seen such a "structure-exposed" ship since first setting eyes on a composite sailplane in 1972. If you happen to know of or own such a ship, simply spraying a UV barrier would eliminate the UV issue (though the ship would still look cruddy and pay an aerodynamic penalty from surface roughness). My conclusion is "the UV concern" is in fact a non-issue with the slightest application of common sense. - - - - - - My bottom line? If it's good for your soul, limit yourself to, and do your best to propagate, crack-free gliders. They ARE beautiful!!! Meanwhile, take care of any glider you're responsible for to the best of your ability...but don't lose sleep over gelcoat cracks you know are not directly due to a structural overstress condition. - - - - - - Anecdotal tale... Back in the early '90's my Club had a G-103A not get signed off for an annual because the (unfamiliar with glass gliders) A&P "got nervous about all the wing cracks." And there were LOTS of them. The small-radii leading edges had beaucoup spanwise cracks from root to tip, and, from nose to several inches back, on top and bottom. Both spoiler boxes had at each corner long cracks radiating well over a foot in length. The remainder of the top surfaces had various long, random, straight-to-arcing chordwise cracks bunched in various spanwise locations. Both bottom surfaces, from root to nearly tip, had closely spaced, mostly straight, chordwise cracks from nearly the leading edge to nearly the trailing edge. JJ explains above why spoiler box corners typically radiate cracks. The differences between top and bottom surface chordwise cracks were likely due to the undersurface being mostly in tension vs. compression for the top gelcoat. The leading edge cracks were likely a result of gelcoat and filler being thicker in that region. The shop quoted $12K for partial gelcoat-removal/inspect/refinish of the wings. By the time Club-labor sanded-to-inspection-depth the entire surfaces of both wings (unsurprisingly, no "into-resin-cracks" found, anywhere), shot on requisite, thin, pin-hole filling polyester "stuff" (I've forgotten what it was, and we later sold that ship for one with a higher payload, despite it getting slightly lighter due to our work), and had an auto body shop shoot both wings with polyurethane, we had less than $4K into the refinish. Looked great. Flew the same. Nary a crack ever showed through the polyurethane. Again, YMMV. Written from the perspective of someone who believes information trumps FUD... Bob W. |
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On Sunday, July 1, 2012 12:09:24 PM UTC-4, JJ Sinclair wrote:
On Sunday, July 1, 2012 7:23:38 AM UTC-7, JJ Sinclair wrote: Remember the crack in the engine mount that failed and brought down the airliner? How about the B-52 that taxied onto the runway, applied full power and the left wing fell off! This all started as a crack near the spar after an air-refuling mishap. Would you fly a wood sailplane with cracks in th skin? No way, don't walk, run away from that puppy! Would you fly an aluminum ship with cracks in the skin? That old girls been rode hard and put away wet, right? Fear of cracks is in our DNA. Remember; Step on a crack and break your mothers back? So now you find a crack in the skin of your fiberglass sailplane. Bad news, right? Actually no. Fiberglass sailplanes are covered with a thin layer of rock-hard gelcoat that was placed over a flexible structure. I remember the DG-400 at Minden, that had been flown extensively in wave conditions. It was literally covered with cracks. The wings had cord-wise cracks every half inch on both sides of both wings. This ship was flying regularly and was considered airworthy. Yeah, but I got a crack coming from the corner of my spoiler box, is my wing going to fall off? Nope, when your wing skin was laid up in its mold, the fiberglass cloth wouldn't fit tightly into the corners and around the edges of your spoiler box, so filler and extra gelcoat was applied all around the spoiler box to allow the cloth to smoothly overlap the box. The corners of the box are stress concentration points and cracks will quite likely appear there. How deep do these cracks go? All the way through the gelcoat and filler, but they stop when they reach the fiberglass cloth because they are gelcoat cracks migrating IN from the rock-hard coating, NOT cracks in the fiberglass migrating OUT! Once again, this is just my humble opinion, but it was formed after 40 years of grinding out your cracks and finding no structural issues. :) JJ Hi Papa3, I have seen the condition you discribe where the epoxy was starting to oxidise, I brushed on a new coat of epoxy over these areas and then proceded with the re-finish. Cheers, JJ I do this when the surface shows white lines in the epoxy. My sense is that the structure is ever so slightly compromised and won't be healing itself. I have found that this seems to stop the "imprinting" that shows up in the paint surface after the filler and paint finish curing. This "imprinting is much less evident in polyester refinishes from my experience, mostly due to much thicker finish.. I just mix a small batch of epoxy and spread it very thinly using a low power heat gun(modeller type) to reduce viscosity and help it wick into all the little defects. A little epoxy goes a very long way. Just another input from somebody who has lots less experience than JJ. UH |
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"Probably the worst culprit is the
Grob 102/3 Despite all their other reported issues Grob is famous for having one of the more durable Gel coats Don. Terry Walsh At 12:26 02 July 2012, Don Johnstone wrote: It appears that a major cause of cracks in gelcoat is the difference in the expansion coefficient of polyester gel and epoxy resin/glass. For this reason my club discourages the practice of taking a glider into air which has a temperature of less than -20 deg C. Giving the airframe a cold soak and then returning it to warmer air quicly will cause substantial cracks but only in the gel. Having said that the gelcoat used on the Slingsby Kestrel did not seem as baddly effected as many other gliders. Probably the worst culprit is the Grob 102/3 At 11:18 02 July 2012, John Firth wrote: One of the best, most informative and authorative threads I have read; reassuring! John F An old, no longer bold pilot. (PIK 20E) At 23:21 01 July 2012, BobW wrote: On 7/1/2012 8:23 AM, JJ Sinclair wrote: Remember the crack in the engine mount that failed and brought down the airliner? How about the B-52 that taxied onto the runway, applied full power and the left wing fell off! This all started as a crack near the spar after an air-refuling mishap. Would you fly a wood sailplane with cracks in th skin? No way, don't walk, run away from that puppy! Would you fly an aluminum ship with cracks in the skin? That old girls been rode hard and put away wet, right? Fear of cracks is in our DNA. Remember; Step on a crack and break your mothers back? So now you find a crack in the skin of your fiberglass sailplane. Bad news, right? Actually no. Fiberglass sailplanes are covered with a thin layer of rock-hard gelcoat that was placed over a flexible structure. I remember the DG-400 at Minden, that had been flown extensively in wave conditions. It was literally covered with cracks. The wings had cord-wise cracks every half inch on both sides of both wings. This ship was flying regularly and was considered airworthy. Yeah, but I got a crack coming from the corner of my spoiler box, is my wing going to fall off? Nope, when your wing skin was laid up in its mold, the fiberglass cloth wouldn't fit tightly into the corners and around the edges of your spoiler box, so filler and extra gelcoat was applied all around the spoiler box to allow the cloth to smoothly overlap the box. The corners of the box are stress concentration points and cracks will quite likely appear there. How deep do these cracks go? All the way through the gelcoat and filler, but they stop when they reach the fiberglass cloth because they are gelcoat cracks migrating IN from the rock-hard coating, NOT cracks in the fiberglass migrating OUT! Once again, this is just my humble opinion, but it was formed after 40 years of grinding out your cracks and finding no structural issues. :) JJ Thanks for bringing your "street cred" to this arena, and, for having the intestinal fortitude offer an empirical, repair-based opinion, JJ! Even if it gores FUD-based oxen... FUD = Fear Uncertainty Doubt My own aerospace-engineering-degreed opinion/conclusion mirrors yours. (FULL DISCLOSU 1) I never made my living in the airplane structural-analysis field; 2) the following discussion assumes "first generation glass" ships, simply because they're the "floppiest" of the composite birds, due to the relative lack of stiffness of glider-specific, structural fiberglass compared to carbon. What follows blends critical-thinking and empirical observation, underlain by a reasonably decent engineering understanding of the materials involved and typical physical properties. It is a GENERAL discussion. The devil is always in the details. YMMV, of course...) There are LOTS of 1st-generation, non-carbon-reinforced, gliders out there in used glider land. Likely, most have experienced gel-coat cracking at various times in their lives, regardless of whether they originally arrived with "the good gelcoat" or "the less-good gelcoat." Probably, by now, most have had gelcoat cracks at some time in their lives. The key element - as JJ noted - is the underlying structure is MUCH more flexible than is any sprayed-in-mold gelcoat. Think chocolate-coated vinyl bar stock. Yeah, it's an awful analogy, but you get the idea...what's underneath will bend - without breaking - far beyond what unmelted chocolate will withstand in its crack-free state. Want another analogy? Think plastic paint stirring stick. How do you clean 'em once paint on 'em has dried? If you're lazy like me, you simply bend 'em back and forth to crack the paint film, then peel. I've never yet broken a plastic paint stirrer. Gelcoat (or paint or any other coating atop the glider's structure) is present for essentially 3 reasons: 1) aerodynamics (maximizing laminar flow runs requires a smooth surface); 2) looks (few people would purchase an un-coated composite glider even if it was the laminar equal of competitors, because to most eyeballs, uncoated would look "unpretty"); and 3) UV protection (UV degrades essentially everything!). Rank 'em in whatever order is important to you... In a nutshell, there tends to be two schools of thought concerning gel-coat cracks. One tends to be FUD-based, one does not. If cracks per-se concern you, then limit your future-ownership-searches only to ships in pristine, uncracked condition. Be prepared to pay accordingly. If you're comfortable with input such as JJ's and the thought process underlying posts as this, your selection will be considerably larger, the asking-price range considerably less exotic, and ship performance little-degraded, in sport XC terms. Dick Johnson had a saying: "Air has fingers, but no eyes." He meant exterior looks were unimportant viz-a-viz surface smoothness, when considering ONLY laminar flow. He also very kindly measured clean and "buggy" performance numbers for just about every 1st-generation ship you might find for sale out there. Number freaks - and many wannabee-XC pilots - obsess over the differences; for all practical purposes few weekend sport pilots will ever have the ability to detect 'em. *Discussing* numerical performance differences is great fun, but of little real-world effect on one's ability to go XC and have huge amounts of fun doing so. Summarizing - the preceding mostly addresses issues arising from the relative stiffnesses of 1st-generation-glass glider *structure* vs. that structure's protective coating. - - - - - - What follows seeks to address two concerns - oft expressed - implying: 1) a direct causal possibility that gel-coat cracks propagate directly INTO the fiberglass, and 2) crack-enabled UV degradation is imminently life-threatening to Joe PIC. Some things to bear in mind: 1) ALL the structural fiberglass is 100% encased within the resin matrix; 2) any NON-structural fiberglass is similarly encased; 3)I've yet to hear a plausible theory for how a gelcoat crack can propagate across the interface into the underlying (relatively soft/non-brittle) resin substrate; 4) "all-fiberglass" composite ships don't routinely suffer from fractured wings, regardless of gelcoat condition; 5) cracks that don't propagate into the substrate will not allow any UV to propagate either; 6) 1st-generation glass ships are designed to stiffness criteria, not strength criteria. That last is significant to the extent that 1st-generation composite glider wings are considerably stronger than they need to be in a pure G-load sense, simply because were they not, no one would buy the ships because their (flutter-limited) Vne would be ridiculously/unusably low. I suspect somewhere on YouTube is a video clip or two of German flutter tests of gliders. Even to paid test pilots, the footage is impressive! But back to "propagating cracks" and "the UV concern"... Propagating cracks - Ask any experienced glider repairman how many crack situations they've seen that they believed to have propagated DOWN/into the structure from the gelcoat, as distinct from the other direction. If I read JJ correctly, his answer appears to be "Zero." When I asked another well-known western glider repairman the same question, his answer was, "Zero." Further he knew of zero gliders relegated to the scrap heap from UV degradation...as distinct from "refinish cost/relative value" considerations. His glider build/repair experience then spanned nearly 3 decades. My conclusion is the cracks you need to worry about do NOT come from routine assembly/flight loads. I know "UH" sometimes is on RAS, and would welcome him sharing his experience in this matter. UV - Pretend you know of a 1st-generation glass ship missing "huge areas" of gelcoat atop both wings...meaning, UV CAN directly access the structure. In time (years? decades? testing definitely required...) the structure would degrade to where strength reduction would become measurably detectable. That said, I've never seen such a "structure-exposed" ship since first setting eyes on a composite sailplane in 1972. If you happen to know of or own such a ship, simply spraying a UV barrier would eliminate the UV issue (though the ship would still look cruddy and pay an aerodynamic penalty from surface roughness). My conclusion is "the UV concern" is in fact a non-issue with the slightest application of common sense. - - - - - - My bottom line? If it's good for your soul, limit yourself to, and do your best to propagate, crack-free gliders. They ARE beautiful!!! Meanwhile, take care of any glider you're responsible for to the best of your ability...but don't lose sleep over gelcoat cracks you know are not directly due to a structural overstress condition. - - - - - - Anecdotal tale... Back in the early '90's my Club had a G-103A not get signed off for an annual because the (unfamiliar with glass gliders) A&P "got nervous about all the wing cracks." And there were LOTS of them. The small-radii leading edges had beaucoup spanwise cracks from root to tip, and, from nose to several inches back, on top and bottom. Both spoiler boxes had at each corner long cracks radiating well over a foot in length. The remainder of the top surfaces had various long, random, straight-to-arcing chordwise cracks bunched in various spanwise locations. Both bottom surfaces, from root to nearly tip, had closely spaced, mostly straight, chordwise cracks from nearly the leading edge to nearly the trailing edge. JJ explains above why spoiler box corners typically radiate cracks. The differences between top and bottom surface chordwise cracks were likely due to the undersurface being mostly in tension vs. compression for the top gelcoat. The leading edge cracks were likely a result of gelcoat and filler being thicker in that region. The shop quoted $12K for partial gelcoat-removal/inspect/refinish of the wings. By the time Club-labor sanded-to-inspection-depth the entire surfaces of both wings (unsurprisingly, no "into-resin-cracks" found, anywhere), shot on requisite, thin, pin-hole filling polyester "stuff" (I've forgotten what it was, and we later sold that ship for one with a higher payload, despite it getting slightly lighter due to our work), and had an auto body shop shoot both wings with polyurethane, we had less than $4K into the refinish. Looked great. Flew the same. Nary a crack ever showed through the polyurethane. Again, YMMV. Written from the perspective of someone who believes information trumps FUD... Bob W. |
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On Jul 2, 5:55*am, Terry Walsh wrote:
"Probably the worst culprit is the Grob 102/3 Despite all their other reported issues Grob is famous for having one of the more durable Gel coats Don. Terry Walsh At 12:26 02 July 2012, Don Johnstone wrote: It appears that a major cause of cracks in gelcoat is the difference in the expansion coefficient of polyester gel and epoxy resin/glass. For this reason my club discourages the practice of taking a glider into air which has a temperature of less than -20 deg C. Giving the airframe a cold soak and then returning it to warmer air quicly will cause substantial cracks but only in the gel. Having said that the gelcoat used on the Slingsby Kestrel did not seem as baddly effected as many other gliders. Probably the worst culprit is the Grob 102/3 At 11:18 02 July 2012, John Firth wrote: One of the best, most informative and authorative threads I have read; reassuring! John F An old, no longer bold pilot. (PIK 20E) At 23:21 01 July 2012, BobW wrote: On 7/1/2012 8:23 AM, JJ Sinclair wrote: Remember the crack in the engine mount that failed and brought down the airliner? How about the B-52 that taxied onto the runway, applied full power and the left wing fell off! This all started as a crack near the spar after an air-refuling mishap. Would you fly a wood sailplane with cracks in th skin? No way, don't walk, run away from that puppy! Would you fly an aluminum ship with cracks in the skin? That old girls been rode hard and put away wet, right? Fear of cracks is in our DNA. Remember; Step on a crack and break your mothers back? So now you find a crack in the skin of your fiberglass sailplane. Bad news, right? Actually no. Fiberglass sailplanes are covered with a thin layer of rock-hard gelcoat that was placed over a flexible structure. I remember the DG-400 at Minden, that had been flown extensively in wave conditions.. It was literally covered with cracks. The wings had cord-wise cracks every half inch on both sides of both wings. This ship was flying regularly and was considered airworthy. Yeah, but I got a crack coming from the corner of my spoiler box, is my wing going to fall off? Nope, when your wing skin was laid up in its mold, the fiberglass cloth wouldn't fit tightly into the corners and around the edges of your spoiler box, so filler and extra gelcoat was applied all around the spoiler box to allow the cloth to smoothly overlap the box. The corners of the box are stress concentration points and cracks will quite likely appear there. How deep do these cracks go? All the way through the gelcoat and filler, but they stop when they reach the fiberglass cloth because they are gelcoat cracks migrating IN from the rock-hard coating, NOT cracks in the fiberglass migrating OUT! Once again, this is just my humble opinion, but it was formed after 40 years of grinding out your cracks and finding no structural issues. :) JJ Thanks for bringing your "street cred" to this arena, and, for having the intestinal fortitude offer an empirical, repair-based opinion, JJ! Even if it gores FUD-based oxen... FUD = Fear Uncertainty Doubt My own aerospace-engineering-degreed opinion/conclusion mirrors yours. (FULL DISCLOSU 1) I never made my living in the airplane structural-analysis field; 2) the following discussion assumes "first generation glass" ships, simply because they're the "floppiest" of the composite birds, due to the relative lack of stiffness of glider-specific, structural fiberglass compared to carbon. What follows blends critical-thinking and empirical observation, underlain by a reasonably decent engineering understanding of the materials involved and typical physical properties. It is a GENERAL discussion. The devil is always in the details. YMMV, of course...) There are LOTS of 1st-generation, non-carbon-reinforced, gliders out there in used glider land. Likely, most have experienced gel-coat cracking at various times in their lives, regardless of whether they originally arrived with "the good gelcoat" or "the less-good gelcoat." Probably, by now, most have had gelcoat cracks at some time in their lives. The key element - as JJ noted - is the underlying structure is MUCH more flexible than is any sprayed-in-mold gelcoat. Think chocolate-coated vinyl bar stock. Yeah, it's an awful analogy, but you get the idea...what's underneath will bend - without breaking - far beyond what unmelted chocolate will withstand in its crack-free state. Want another analogy? Think plastic paint stirring stick. How do you clean 'em once paint on 'em has dried? If you're lazy like me, you simply bend 'em back and forth to crack the paint film, then peel. I've never yet broken a plastic paint stirrer. Gelcoat (or paint or any other coating atop the glider's structure) is present for essentially 3 reasons: 1) aerodynamics (maximizing laminar flow runs requires a smooth surface); 2) looks (few people would purchase an un-coated composite glider even if it was the laminar equal of competitors, because to most eyeballs, uncoated would look "unpretty"); and 3) UV protection (UV degrades essentially everything!). Rank 'em in whatever order is important to you... In a nutshell, there tends to be two schools of thought concerning gel-coat cracks. One tends to be FUD-based, one does not. If cracks per-se concern you, then limit your future-ownership-searches only to ships in pristine, uncracked condition. Be prepared to pay accordingly. If you're comfortable with input such as JJ's and the thought process underlying posts as this, your selection will be considerably larger, the asking-price range considerably less exotic, and ship performance little-degraded, in sport XC terms. Dick Johnson had a saying: "Air has fingers, but no eyes." He meant exterior looks were unimportant viz-a-viz surface smoothness, when considering ONLY laminar flow. He also very kindly measured clean and "buggy" performance numbers for just about every 1st-generation ship you might find for sale out there. Number freaks - and many wannabee-XC pilots - obsess over the differences; for all practical purposes few weekend sport pilots will ever have the ability to detect 'em. *Discussing* numerical performance differences is great fun, but of little real-world effect on one's ability to go XC and have huge amounts of fun doing so. Summarizing - the preceding mostly addresses issues arising from the relative stiffnesses of 1st-generation-glass glider *structure* vs. that structure's protective coating. - - - - - - What follows seeks to address two concerns - oft expressed - implying: 1) a direct causal possibility that gel-coat cracks propagate directly INTO the fiberglass, and 2) crack-enabled UV degradation is imminently life-threatening to Joe PIC. Some things to bear in mind: 1) ALL the structural fiberglass is 100% encased within the resin matrix; 2) any NON-structural fiberglass is similarly encased; 3)I've yet to hear a plausible theory for how a gelcoat crack can propagate across the interface into the underlying (relatively soft/non-brittle) resin substrate; 4) "all-fiberglass" composite ships don't routinely suffer from fractured wings, regardless of gelcoat condition; 5) cracks that don't propagate into the substrate will not allow any UV to propagate either; 6) 1st-generation glass ships are designed to stiffness criteria, not strength criteria. That last is significant to the extent that 1st-generation composite glider wings are considerably stronger than they need to be in a pure G-load sense, simply because were they not, no one would buy the ships because their (flutter-limited) Vne would be ridiculously/unusably low. I suspect somewhere on YouTube is a video clip or two of German flutter tests of gliders. Even to paid test pilots, the footage is impressive! But back to "propagating cracks" and "the UV concern"... Propagating cracks - Ask any experienced glider repairman how many crack situations they've seen that they believed to have propagated DOWN/into the structure from the gelcoat, as distinct from the other direction. If I read JJ correctly, his answer appears to be "Zero." When I asked another well-known western glider repairman the same question, his answer was, "Zero." Further he knew of zero gliders relegated to the scrap heap from UV degradation...as distinct from "refinish cost/relative value" considerations. His glider build/repair experience then spanned nearly 3 decades. My conclusion is the cracks you need to worry about do NOT come from routine assembly/flight loads. I know "UH" sometimes is on RAS, and would welcome him sharing his experience in this matter. UV - Pretend you know of a 1st-generation glass ship missing "huge areas" of gelcoat atop both wings...meaning, UV CAN directly access the structure. In time (years? decades? testing definitely required...) the structure would ... read more »- Hide quoted text - - Show quoted text - Yup. Grob gelcoat seems to be about the best I've seen. I'm partner in a Janus C that had gelcoat literally blowing off of the top of the wing. The bond had failed so completely that I didn't sand the remaining gelcoat off, I SCRAPED/CHIPPED it off using a pnuematic scraper (see the terrifying video on YouTube "Removing Failed Gelcoat") (sorry, I can't provide a link right now). 5 gallons of PCL PolyPrimer, lots of sanding, and gallons of PPG concept, followed by more sanding and buffing. If it still looks good in 5 years, I'll declare victory. |
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