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I'm looking for tips on a proven, lightweight, leak-free, and
long-life installation of threaded brass fittings into my composite fuel tanks. I have the typical fuel finger strainers, fuel sump, and other threaded hardware to install. The strainer and sump may need to be removed and reinstalled on occasion. The obvious way is to use 1/4-inch or thicker phenolic, drilled and tapped for the hardware. Scuffed phenolic would certainly give a nice permanent bond with the epoxy, but I've heard that some folks who have gone this route have had trouble later with the threads stripping in the phenolic. Another builder suggested that I use a 1/4-inch brass strip. I'm not sure how well brass will bond with epoxy, and it's awfully heavy. Aluminum is another possibility and certainly lighter, but another recent thread in this newsgroup cautions about the difficulty of getting a permanent epoxy bond with aluminum. Titanium, magnesium, other? Of course if metal, it has to be compatible with brass. Thanks, Greg |
#2
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Greg,
How about a phenol plate bonded in to the tank. Then turn a bung with a flange sufficient to seal and bolt to the plate. Tap the bung, install the fitting. If it should ever stip out replace the bung and retap. Did this as a repair on a poly tank in my jeep. Trouble free for two years now. (without the phenol panel tho). All the best Sean Trost Greg Reid wrote: I'm looking for tips on a proven, lightweight, leak-free, and long-life installation of threaded brass fittings into my composite fuel tanks. I have the typical fuel finger strainers, fuel sump, and other threaded hardware to install. The strainer and sump may need to be removed and reinstalled on occasion. The obvious way is to use 1/4-inch or thicker phenolic, drilled and tapped for the hardware. Scuffed phenolic would certainly give a nice permanent bond with the epoxy, but I've heard that some folks who have gone this route have had trouble later with the threads stripping in the phenolic. Another builder suggested that I use a 1/4-inch brass strip. I'm not sure how well brass will bond with epoxy, and it's awfully heavy. Aluminum is another possibility and certainly lighter, but another recent thread in this newsgroup cautions about the difficulty of getting a permanent epoxy bond with aluminum. Titanium, magnesium, other? Of course if metal, it has to be compatible with brass. Thanks, Greg |
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Greg Reid asks;
Aluminum is another possibility and certainly lighter, but another recent thread in this newsgroup cautions about the difficulty of getting a permanent epoxy bond with aluminum. Every composite canard aircraft out there uses aluminum hardpoints for NPT threaded attachments into the tank, for the wing bolts, etc. I've never heard of any of these (2000+ aircraft) leaking or failing. Corroding, maybe, on one or two Vari-EZ's that live near the ocean, but that's about it. The aluminum used for the tank drain mount points is completely buried - only the threads get exposed, and only until the fitting is screwed in. Data's worth more than theory. -- Marc J. Zeitlin http://marc.zeitlin.home.comcast.net/ http://www.cozybuilders.org/ Copyright (c) 2004 |
#4
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Greg,
I've made some repairs to German built gliders in the past. One installation I have seen from the factory is to take a section of brass rod approx 3/8" in diameter and drill and tap it. Knurl the outside with a lathe and bond it in with the same epoxy as the structure. No way will it pull out. If the threads happen to strip, insert a helicoil. All this is predicated on having thick enough material to make it work. |
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Thanks very much for all of the helpful responses, folks. OK, I'll go
with 3/8 aluminum -- drilled and etched and bonded in place ASAP after the etching. Regards, Greg |
#7
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