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#1
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#2
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Wood isn't very expensive. Yet. While we're all sitting around with our thumb
up our ass waiting for the bean counters to deliver another unworkable bureaucratic solution to our steadily dwindling numbers, maybe we should be teaching folks how to whittle their own airplanes. And powered by a Whittle engine, Frankly? Ed Wischmeyer |
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#3
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Lol... I'd be one of those currently on the low end of the scale. And if
anyone had told me seven years ago that I'd not only build a flying machine, but that it would be providing my income for the next three months, I'd have beat him with a spar. But, as fate would have it, the replica Wright machines have turned out to be my salvation. Now, if we can just get yellow poplar recognised as a widely aceptable replacement for spruce, I really could build a Home Depot airplane! Harry Wright 1902 glider - hull #7 Wright 1899 kite - hull #6 By the way, a good jack plane is an excelent way to trim the long surfaces of those laminations flat in a hurry. |
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#4
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#5
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"Fred the Red Shirt" wrote in message om... snippage Then you'd be able to use woods like birch, or ash which are a lot tougher than poplar. Ash in partcular resists plitting as does beech which would be an excellent wood for parts subject to shock loading like landing gear. Splitting beech is like trying to split a block of hard rubber. Whittle yourself a Beech craft? ![]() Tim Ward |
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#6
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That's funny. The front skids, landing skids, lower tail support, ribs, and hip
cradle of my Wright machine are all made of ash. Harry |
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#7
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"Wright1902Glider" wrote in message ... That's funny. The front skids, landing skids, lower tail support, ribs, and hip cradle of my Wright machine are all made of ash. Harry Because of ash's good bendability, I presume. Are the skids laminated? -- Jim in NC |
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