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I'm spending a drizzly day going thru the section of AC43 dealing with
riveting and have an initial question. I think I know the answer but could use some comformation. Figure 4-5 shows Rivet spacing for single-lap sheet splice. It shows a double row of rivets in one case and the note "Strength thru this section is 75% of sheet w/o holes". In the second illustration it show more than two rows of rivets and a greater overlap with the note "Strength thru this section is 83% of sheet without holes". My question is/was "How do you determine how much overlap there should be?" My tentative answer is "The more rivets, the stronger the joint. If 75% of the original sheet strength is fine, then overlap enough to sustain a double row of rivets. If 83% is needed, then go to an overlap that will support three rows of rivets. " Is my logic correct? Also, is 83% as good as it gets? if so, why show more than 3 rows? - Mike |
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In a previous article, Michael Horowitz said:
[snip] I didn't find that question particularly riveting. Sorry. :-) -- Paul Tomblin http://blog.xcski.com/ Last I checked, it wasn't the power cord for the Clue Generator that was sticking up your ass. -- John Novak |
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On Aug 29, 11:52*am, Michael Horowitz wrote:
...Figure 4-5 shows Rivet spacing for single-lap sheet splice. It shows a double row of rivets in one case and the note "Strength thru this section is 75% of sheet w/o holes". In the second illustration it show more than two rows of rivets and a greater overlap with the note "Strength thru this section is 83% of sheet without holes". My question is/was "How do you determine how much overlap there should be?" My tentative answer is "The more rivets, the stronger the joint. If 75% of the original sheet strength is fine, then overlap enough to sustain *a double row of rivets. If 83% is needed, then go to an overlap that will support three rows of rivets. " Is my logic correct? Also, is 83% as good as it gets? if so, why show more than 3 rows? In my printed copy (AC 43.13-1A change three, circa 1990), that figure is numbered 2.18. Note that the arrow points to a section line that passes through a series of rivet holes. The way I read it, they're talking about the strength of the aluminum sheet at that section line, not the strength of the joint. My reasoning is that the strength seems to be relative to the amount of material subtracted by the rivet holes. In the upper portion of the figure, the rivet spacing at the indicated section is 4D, where D is the diameter of the rivet. So there is 3D of material and then 1D of rivet hole where the material is missing. Since 25% of the material along that section is absent on account of having been drilled away, it stands to (mine at least) reason that the sheet strength along that section line is 75% of what it was before all that drilling happened. In the lower portion of the figure, note that at the indicated section line the rivet spacing is 6D. So you have 5D of material and then 1D of rivet hole where the material is missing, with 1/6=16.7% of the material drilled away leaving 100%-16.7%=about 83% of the original material along that section line. If this is about the Taylorcraft wing rib repairs you were asking about in an earlier post, it looks to me like the kind of repair you need is not well addressed in AC43.13. The section on metal wing and tail rib repairs points you to a pretty looking figure, but then the figure points you to paragraph 100e for the minimum number of rivets, and 100e points you to figure 2.29 without showing how to determine the width W that you need to make sense of the table. My suggestion would be to find an actual A&P or IA who has actually fixed one of these little puddle-jumpers, and ask them what they'd do. Failing that, skip ahead a couple of figures to the one titled "Typical metal rib repairs" (It's figure 2.22 in my old copy), and do something similar to what they show there. Thanks, Bob K. |
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Bronx cheering noise
On Fri, 29 Aug 2008 21:06:21 +0000 (UTC), (Paul Tomblin) wrote: In a previous article, Michael Horowitz said: [snip] I didn't find that question particularly riveting. Sorry. :-) |
#5
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![]() On Fri, 29 Aug 2008 15:45:35 -0700 (PDT), Bob Kuykendall wrote: On Aug 29, 11:52Â*am, Michael Horowitz wrote: ...Figure 4-5 shows Rivet spacing for single-lap sheet splice. It shows a double row of rivets in one case and the note "Strength thru this section is 75% of sheet w/o holes". In the second illustration it show more than two rows of rivets and a greater overlap with the note "Strength thru this section is 83% of sheet without holes". My question is/was "How do you determine how much overlap there should be?" My tentative answer is "The more rivets, the stronger the joint. If 75% of the original sheet strength is fine, then overlap enough to sustain Â*a double row of rivets. If 83% is needed, then go to an overlap that will support three rows of rivets. " Is my logic correct? Also, is 83% as good as it gets? if so, why show more than 3 rows? In my printed copy (AC 43.13-1A change three, circa 1990), that figure is numbered 2.18. Note that the arrow points to a section line that passes through a series of rivet holes. The way I read it, they're talking about the strength of the aluminum sheet at that section line, not the strength of the joint. My reasoning is that the strength seems to be relative to the amount of material subtracted by the rivet holes. In the upper portion of the figure, the rivet spacing at the indicated section is 4D, where D is the diameter of the rivet. So there is 3D of material and then 1D of rivet hole where the material is missing. Since 25% of the material along that section is absent on account of having been drilled away, it stands to (mine at least) reason that the sheet strength along that section line is 75% of what it was before all that drilling happened. In the lower portion of the figure, note that at the indicated section line the rivet spacing is 6D. So you have 5D of material and then 1D of rivet hole where the material is missing, with 1/6=16.7% of the material drilled away leaving 100%-16.7%=about 83% of the original material along that section line. If this is about the Taylorcraft wing rib repairs you were asking about in an earlier post, it looks to me like the kind of repair you need is not well addressed in AC43.13. The section on metal wing and tail rib repairs points you to a pretty looking figure, but then the figure points you to paragraph 100e for the minimum number of rivets, and 100e points you to figure 2.29 without showing how to determine the width W that you need to make sense of the table. My suggestion would be to find an actual A&P or IA who has actually fixed one of these little puddle-jumpers, and ask them what they'd do. Failing that, skip ahead a couple of figures to the one titled "Typical metal rib repairs" (It's figure 2.22 in my old copy), and do something similar to what they show there. Thanks, Bob K. Yep; same repair - Mike |
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