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I can twist and turn various tubular parts on my restoration project
and hear rust rolling down the tube. Assuming there is no serious corrosion, how is this treated? Does one make any attempt to remove rust from these sealed tubes or simply inject boiled linseed oil (etc.), slosh, drain? - Mike |
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On Sat, 18 Aug 2007 06:36:27 -0400, Michael Horowitz
wrote: I can twist and turn various tubular parts on my restoration project and hear rust rolling down the tube. Assuming there is no serious corrosion, how is this treated? Does one make any attempt to remove rust from these sealed tubes or simply inject boiled linseed oil (etc.), slosh, drain? - Mike what you need to get is an ultrasonic wall thickness tester. I borrowed one used by a bulldozer company that was used to test hydraulic ram wall thicknesses. you need to know what the intended tube thickness was. you calibrate the unit for steel sound propagation and just put the probe to the tube. about 10 seconds later it gives a readout of wall thickness. I spent two nights going over my fuselage. thankfully there was no wall thinning due corrosion and no internal corrosion. as for killing rust I'd use linseed. I had an RLU Breezy project in the hangar that was rusting all over. I mixed 50/50 linseed and mineral turpentine and brushed it on over all the fuselage. it killed the corrosion dead and two years later there still wasnt any rust activity. that was on the outside of the fuselage. inside the tubes the linseed will glue the rattles. ac43-13 has some info as well. Stealth Pilot |
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Michael Horowitz wrote:
I can twist and turn various tubular parts on my restoration project and hear rust rolling down the tube. Assuming there is no serious corrosion, how is this treated? Does one make any attempt to remove rust from these sealed tubes or simply inject boiled linseed oil (etc.), slosh, drain? - Mike The modern replacement for linseed oil is LPS Hardcoat or LPS-3. I don't know whether it actually works any better, but it smells about the same and costs more. Linseed Oil is extremely susceptible to spontaneous combustion, so dispose of linseed oil soaked rags properly. http://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Linseed_oil -- John Kimmel I think it will be quiet around here now. So long. |
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