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CC: Zenith Aircraft Company
I have an aeronautical engineer friend retired from McDonnell Douglas who once was in charge of the Harrier project for the U.S. team. I respect his opinion which is that pull type, "pop" rivets are only used on aircraft where a bucked rivet could not possibly be used or on non-critical, low stress applications. It is my understanding that the bucked rivet, which has been used over the years in aluminum aircraft, is stronger than the pull- type pop rivet. In consideration of the Zenith Aircraft 601 and 701, how is it that they are using a Textron Brand pull-type rivet? Has there been some breakthrough in material or design in theses Textron pop rivets making them comparable to the old style "bucked" rivets? Thanks, Andrew |
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Earlier, Andrew wrote:
I have an aeronautical engineer friend retired from McDonnell Douglas who once was in charge of the Harrier project for the U.S. team. I respect his opinion which is that pull type, "pop" rivets are only used on aircraft where a bucked rivet could not possibly be used or on non-critical, low stress applications. It is my understanding that the bucked rivet, which has been used over the years in aluminum aircraft, is stronger than the pull- type pop rivet. In consideration of the Zenith Aircraft 601 and 701, how is it that they are using a Textron Brand pull-type rivet? Has there been some breakthrough in material or design in theses Textron pop rivets making them comparable to the old style "bucked" rivets? This question comes up regularly. I'm starting to think we need an FAQ page on it somewhere. The short answer is, it depends. The slightly longer answer is that not all pop rivets are created equal. For example, the Emhart MK- and MP-series Monel pop rivets and their Cherry commercial MSC and MSP equivalents have shear strength values on a par with equivalently sized MS20470AD and MS20426AD solid rivets. They're also about a hundred times more expensive than the solid rivets, but still only about 1/5 the price of CherryMax and CherryLock aerospace rivets. The aside to the slightly longer answer is that Chris Heintz was wrong when he referred to Monel as a type of stainless steel. There is no iron at all to it; Monel is an alloy of nickel and copper. It is more galvanically neutral than stainless steel. Monel pop rivets have a long and well-proven service history in several aircraft designs, of which I'm most familiar with Dick Schreder's HP/RS series kit sailplanes. The somewhat longer answer is that, aside aside, Chris Heintz is a smart guy and a capable designer and engineer, and that the Zenith aircraft are specifically designed around the strength values available from the specified rivets. They are also generally designed around the lower strength values of 6061-T6 aluminum sheet instead of the more expensive 2024-T3 aluminum more common in production airplanes. There are some compromises required, but in general the result is better economy in a perfectly servicable airplane. I'm an amateur, don't try this at work. Thanks, and best regards to all Bob K. http://www.hpaircraft.com/hp-24 |
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Doug Hoffman wrote:
Andrew wrote: It is my understanding that the bucked rivet, which has been used over the years in aluminum aircraft, is stronger than the pull- type pop rivet. In consideration of the Zenith Aircraft 601 and 701, how is it that they are using a Textron Brand pull-type rivet? Has there been some breakthrough in material or design in theses Textron pop rivets making them comparable to the old style "bucked" rivets? Apparently Zenith took into account the strength of the Textron pull rivets when designing the aircraft. Perhaps this meant they used more pull rivets than solid bucked rivets. Whatever. If the design accounts for the strength of the fasteners then there is no problem. -- Doug via Treo handheld That is correct, Doug. I think his basic formula is along the lines of( 4 pulled rivets = 3 bucked rivets = 1 AN bolt). That may not be exactly right but you get the idea. It's been a long time since I read that part of my build manual. When I started and bought all my rivets Zenith was even specific on which Avdel "Avex" rivets you used. The ones made in the UK were OK those made in other places were not. The design shear strength is 110 & 180psi depending on which size is used. The proper rivets are 130 and 220 psi. After years of bilding I have little doubt that you could probably remove every other rivet in the aircraft and it would still fly. Not that I'd try it. Andrew, the Zenith website has quite a bit on Chris' design theories. |
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Bob Kuykendall wrote:
(some snippage for ptactice) The somewhat longer answer is that, aside aside, Chris Heintz is a smart guy and a capable designer and engineer, and that the Zenith aircraft are specifically designed around the strength values available from the specified rivets. They are also generally designed around the lower strength values of 6061-T6 aluminum sheet instead of the more expensive 2024-T3 aluminum more common in production airplanes. There are some compromises required, but in general the result is better economy in a perfectly servicable airplane. I'm an amateur, don't try this at work. Thanks, and best regards to all Bob K. http://www.hpaircraft.com/hp-24 Chris also uses flat head flush rivets - but with specially modified tool heads that deform the flat rivet head into a round finished head. This "work hardens" the rivet head. And them things are a bear to drill out... Richard |
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On 27 Apr 2007 08:14:59 -0700, Andrew wrote:
CC: Zenith Aircraft Company I have an aeronautical engineer friend retired from McDonnell Douglas who once was in charge of the Harrier project for the U.S. team. I respect his opinion which is that pull type, "pop" rivets are only used on aircraft where a bucked rivet could not possibly be used or on non-critical, low stress applications. It is my understanding that the bucked rivet, which has been used over the years in aluminum aircraft, is stronger than the pull- type pop rivet. In consideration of the Zenith Aircraft 601 and 701, how is it that they are using a Textron Brand pull-type rivet? Has there been some breakthrough in material or design in theses Textron pop rivets making them comparable to the old style "bucked" rivets? Thanks, Andrew There are about 3 times as many rivets in a Zenith Aircraft than would be required for strength alone - they are put closer together to keep the edges smooth etc. The Textrons are a lot different than hardware store POP rivets. -- Posted via a free Usenet account from http://www.teranews.com |
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Andrew wrote:
It is my understanding that the bucked rivet, which has been used over the years in aluminum aircraft, is stronger than the pull- type pop rivet. In consideration of the Zenith Aircraft 601 and 701, how is it that they are using a Textron Brand pull-type rivet? Has there been some breakthrough in material or design in theses Textron pop rivets making them comparable to the old style "bucked" rivets? Apparently Zenith took into account the strength of the Textron pull rivets when designing the aircraft. Perhaps this meant they used more pull rivets than solid bucked rivets. Whatever. If the design accounts for the strength of the fasteners then there is no problem. -- Doug via Treo handheld -- Posted via a free Usenet account from http://www.teranews.com |
#7
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"Andrew" wrote in message
ups.com... CC: Zenith Aircraft Company I have an aeronautical engineer friend retired from McDonnell Douglas who once was in charge of the Harrier project for the U.S. team. I respect his opinion which is that pull type, "pop" rivets are only used on aircraft where a bucked rivet could not possibly be used or on non-critical, low stress applications. That opinion is not shared by everyone. Now, you can't willy nilly replace bucked rivets with pop rivets, but there are examples of aircraft designed for pop rivets. The T-18 is an example. It would be hard to argue that John Thorpe didn'd know what he was doing, eh? It is my understanding that the bucked rivet, which has been used over the years in aluminum aircraft, is stronger than the pull- type pop rivet. In consideration of the Zenith Aircraft 601 and 701, how is it that they are using a Textron Brand pull-type rivet? They designed it that way? Has there been some breakthrough in material or design in theses Textron pop rivets making them comparable to the old style "bucked" rivets? I doubt it. John Thorpe specified Monel pop rivet from, IIRC, U.S. Shoe Manufacturing (But don't quote me on the source - it's been 30 years since I worked on a T-18) -- Geoff The Sea Hawk at Wow Way d0t Com remove spaces and make the obvious substitutions to reply by mail When immigration is outlawed, only outlaws will immigrate. |
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On Apr 27, 9:14 am, Andrew wrote:
CC: Zenith Aircraft Company I have an aeronautical engineer friend retired from McDonnell Douglas who once was in charge of the Harrier project for the U.S. team. I respect his opinion which is that pull type, "pop" rivets are only used on aircraft where a bucked rivet could not possibly be used or on non-critical, low stress applications. It is my understanding that the bucked rivet, which has been used over the years in aluminum aircraft, is stronger than the pull- type pop rivet. In consideration of the Zenith Aircraft 601 and 701, how is it that they are using a Textron Brand pull-type rivet? Has there been some breakthrough in material or design in theses Textron pop rivets making them comparable to the old style "bucked" rivets? Thanks, Andrew The Zenith line of experimental aircraft are designed around the Avex pulled rivets. Gigs statement about 4=3=1 is a good way to look at the fastener concept. So far my Zenith 801 with the V-8 Ford in it has shown no signs of failing at any joint. Yet. G I can tell ya it has 14,210 pulled rivets in it. :-) Ben N801BH |
#9
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On Apr 27, 8:14 am, Andrew wrote:
CC: Zenith Aircraft Company I have an aeronautical engineer friend retired from McDonnell Douglas who once was in charge of the Harrier project for the U.S. team. I respect his opinion which is that pull type, "pop" rivets are only used on aircraft where a bucked rivet could not possibly be used or on non-critical, low stress applications. It is my understanding that the bucked rivet, which has been used over the years in aluminum aircraft, is stronger than the pull- type pop rivet. In consideration of the Zenith Aircraft 601 and 701, how is it that they are using a Textron Brand pull-type rivet? Has there been some breakthrough in material or design in theses Textron pop rivets making them comparable to the old style "bucked" rivets? Thanks, Andrew You have recieved some good replies on this one. I would like to add my 2 cents, since I have a fair amount of experience analyzing aircraft structures. I will simply post the following facts that I have collected over the years. 1) The STATIC strength of cherrymax and cherrylock or Avex rivets is usually stronger than the static strength of bucked solid rivets. This is due to the fact that the stem is usually made of stronger material than the outside collar. Aircraft (NAS or MS spec) quality blind rivets are used in many production aircraft, and strength specifications for them are in every major aircraft manufacturing structures manual that I have seen, and I have seen most of them. They are approved by Boeing, Lockheed, etc., for installation in PRIMARY structure. 2) The main accepted shortcoming of "pop" rivets in the aircraft structures community, is one of fatigue strength. The failure of pop rivets in fatigue was brought to attention by the crash of a helicopter into the East river in NYC a few years ago, that was attributed to the structural failure of a tail rotor area repair done using Cherrymax rivets. Bell helicopter did some fatigue research concerning pop rivets following this. The results of the report are proprietary, but available, and states the general rule that pop rivets have only about 80% the fatigue life of bucked solid rivets. (My personal take on this is the report did not consider all the factors involved, such as hole dimensions or more specifically repair "quality". The helicopter that crashed did not have the hole dimensions available. If the drill holes for the pop rivets used in the repair were elongated or "wallowed" out (since they were done by hand), then that would explain the fatigue failure. Bucked rivets are much more deformable than pop rivets, and are therefore more forgiving of a less than perfect installation. This is only my opinion) 3) Many production aircraft use Cherrymax rivets in critical structure, where bucked rivets are not practical. The Aerostar high performance twin comes to mind. Many pop rivets are used in the wing, straight from the factory. 4) As was stated by someone else, Cherrymax rivets are WAY more expensive than bucked rivets. Need we say more? 5) There are also many blind or "pop" bolts out there! My Cessna just had a repair kit (from Cessna) installed that used a NAS 1669 "Jo Bolt" to repair the front wing spar attachment. Talk about critical structure! Regards, Bud |
#10
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