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#12
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I'll see if I can find a photo of the ones I made.
Stealth Pilot- Hide quoted text - - Show quoted text - Stealth, I know exactly what you're talking about. The clamps that held Wilbur Wright's test "air plane" and flat plate to the bicycle-wheel-thingy of the 1901 aerodynamic experiment are made that way (on a much smaller scale). For those of you that think airfoils are the subject of University wind tunnels, Reynolds Numbers, and other such ilk, you may find it interesting to know that good 'ole Wilbur Wright made his first aerodynamic studies by mounting them on a bike wheel attached horizontally to another bike. The apparatus's power source was only rated at one "Orville", but that was sufficient to determine that Smeaton's coefficient of air pressure was flawed. The follow-up tests were run in a wind tunnel made of pine boards. Harry |
#13
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wrote in message
... I'll see if I can find a photo of the ones I made. Stealth Pilot- Hide quoted text - - Show quoted text - Stealth, I know exactly what you're talking about. The clamps that held Wilbur Wright's test "air plane" and flat plate to the bicycle-wheel-thingy of the 1901 aerodynamic experiment are made that way (on a much smaller scale). For those of you that think airfoils are the subject of University wind tunnels, Reynolds Numbers, and other such ilk, you may find it interesting to know that good 'ole Wilbur Wright made his first aerodynamic studies by mounting them on a bike wheel attached horizontally to another bike. The apparatus's power source was only rated at one "Orville", but that was sufficient to determine that Smeaton's coefficient of air pressure was flawed. The follow-up tests were run in a wind tunnel made of pine boards. Harry From a sign currently posted in their bicycle shop: "Thousands of pages have been written on the so-called science of flying, but for the most part, the ideas set forth, like the designs for the machines, were mere speculations and probably ninety percent were false." Wilbur Wright -- 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 Mar 24, 2:01*pm, wrote:
On Mar 24, 2:02*am, Bob Hoover wrote: I'm leaning toward that myself. When the tubes came out of the acid, I rinsed them in clean tap water and then let them air-dry. I actually watched them rust in a period of 5 minutes. Harry Another thought - I've seen some EMT that has been painted/coated on the inside. The acid won't remove that. If that is the kind of EMT you are using for practice burn out the paint and then use a wire brush from the plumbing section to clean it out. ======================= Leon McAtee |
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On Mar 24, 1:01*pm, wrote:
On Mar 24, 2:02*am, Bob Hoover wrote: On Mar 23, 8:14*am, wrote: Without seeing it I would have guessed a contaminant on your filler rod, but if it's happening ahead of the pool it may be something on the tubing, such as some sort of residue from the zinc. -Bob I'm leaning toward that myself. When the tubes came out of the acid, I rinsed them in clean tap water and then let them air-dry. I actually watched them rust in a period of 5 minutes. Once the tubes were dry, I shoe-shined them with a Scotchbrite pad. They looked nice and shiny, but I didn't do any further cleaning. I also didn't clean the filler rod. Its copper-coated, but that doesn't seem to be doing it, or I would have the problem all of the time. ----------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------- Okay. At least we are singing off the same sheet of music. And to be honest, the stuff we used, circa 1972, was salvaged from a local lumber yard in a building erected sometime between 1945 and 1953. They gave us (the local Scout troop) the stuff in return for hauling it away. The EMT had held only a couple of wires, which we salvaged and sold as copper scrap. The EMT was sliced into 12" lengths BY HAND using Boy-Power (a Troop joke), and hack-saws having 32 tpi. After chopping we had a fair sized BIN of tubing 'coupons' on which to practice, plus a pretty good pile of long pieces destined for another Project... once the boy's learned to weld tubing. To remove the galvanizing we cheated a bit and hauled most of the stuff to a shop in Oceanside where the guy dipped them in heaven knows what but it required neutralizing. On the final dip the coupons picked up a film of oil that was floated on the Mystery Fluid (which I thin was just hot water). Bottom Line: No rusty coupons even a year later... although we did have to de-grease the stuff before using. One of us was a Navy Chief, several other fathers were Marine Corps NCO's. Another was a dentist, another the Shop Teacher at our local high school. I mention all this because nowadays, in so far as I know, we don't even have a Scout troop; the local school district has 86'd ALL 'shop' classes due to various Fears and Budget Problems... most of which are the Product of the same local School District members. Our little town (Vista, California) is now a fearful place where Political Correctness carries more weight than having a roof that don't leak, a car that runs good, and if you want to get anything DONE you'd damn well better be able to speak Spanish because the local crop of youngsters willing and ABLE to tackle life's physical chores has vanished into the reality of computer games... played on machines they can't repair... and discussed via hunt & pecked messages because they can't touch-type. -Bob (who is still coming up with those Dreadful Projects... [the current acorn is how to build a cabinet that turns an inexpensive portable electric saw into an even less expensive Table Saw, needed to reduce scrap lumber to longerons and sticks for ribs and a hell of a lot of fun along the way.) But I fed you a clanger on the tubing, Harry. But I was afraid if I dug too deeply into the Nitty and the Gritty I'd soon find myself with no one to talk to :-) |
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On Mar 24, 1:51*pm, wrote:
For those of you that think airfoils are the subject of University wind tunnels, Reynolds Numbers, and other such ilk, you may find it interesting to know that good 'ole Wilbur Wright made his first aerodynamic studies by mounting them on a bike wheel attached horizontally to another bike. ------------------------------------------------------------------------- Roger that, Harry. I don't know if you'll recall but you and I had an enjoyable exchange on that topic some years ago. I've always thought Oriville's 'How We Inveted The Airplane' one of the best books I ever read. (I still havve a copy around here somewhere.) One of my dad's favorite terms for know-it-all airmen was to refer to them as 'Orville's Flight Instructor.' This was soon reduced to: "Another OFI... " and a shared grin. I sure hate to see those days slipping away from me. -Bob |
#19
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On Wed, 25 Mar 2009 06:11:09 -0700 (PDT), Bob Hoover
wrote: On Mar 24, 1:51*pm, wrote: For those of you that think airfoils are the subject of University wind tunnels, Reynolds Numbers, and other such ilk, you may find it interesting to know that good 'ole Wilbur Wright made his first aerodynamic studies by mounting them on a bike wheel attached horizontally to another bike. ------------------------------------------------------------------------- Roger that, Harry. I don't know if you'll recall but you and I had an enjoyable exchange on that topic some years ago. I've always thought Oriville's 'How We Inveted The Airplane' one of the best books I ever read. (I still havve a copy around here somewhere.) One of my dad's favorite terms for know-it-all airmen was to refer to them as 'Orville's Flight Instructor.' This was soon reduced to: "Another OFI... " and a shared grin. I sure hate to see those days slipping away from me. -Bob been having a few people die around me lately. bit offputting. but I steam on regardless. I wannabe an active pilot at 99. Stealth (just a wannabe :-) ) Pilot |
#20
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Bob Hoover wrote:
On Mar 24, 1:01 pm, wrote: On Mar 24, 2:02 am, Bob Hoover wrote: On Mar 23, 8:14 am, wrote: Without seeing it I would have guessed a contaminant on your filler rod, but if it's happening ahead of the pool it may be something on the tubing, such as some sort of residue from the zinc. -Bob I'm leaning toward that myself. When the tubes came out of the acid, I rinsed them in clean tap water and then let them air-dry. I actually watched them rust in a period of 5 minutes. Once the tubes were dry, I shoe-shined them with a Scotchbrite pad. They looked nice and shiny, but I didn't do any further cleaning. I also didn't clean the filler rod. Its copper-coated, but that doesn't seem to be doing it, or I would have the problem all of the time. ----------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------- Okay. At least we are singing off the same sheet of music. And to be honest, the stuff we used, circa 1972, was salvaged from a local lumber yard in a building erected sometime between 1945 and 1953. They gave us (the local Scout troop) the stuff in return for hauling it away. The EMT had held only a couple of wires, which we salvaged and sold as copper scrap. The EMT was sliced into 12" lengths BY HAND using Boy-Power (a Troop joke), and hack-saws having 32 tpi. After chopping we had a fair sized BIN of tubing 'coupons' on which to practice, plus a pretty good pile of long pieces destined for another Project... once the boy's learned to weld tubing. To remove the galvanizing we cheated a bit and hauled most of the stuff to a shop in Oceanside where the guy dipped them in heaven knows what but it required neutralizing. On the final dip the coupons picked up a film of oil that was floated on the Mystery Fluid (which I thin was just hot water). Bottom Line: No rusty coupons even a year later... although we did have to de-grease the stuff before using. One of us was a Navy Chief, several other fathers were Marine Corps NCO's. Another was a dentist, another the Shop Teacher at our local high school. I mention all this because nowadays, in so far as I know, we don't even have a Scout troop; the local school district has 86'd ALL 'shop' classes due to various Fears and Budget Problems... most of which are the Product of the same local School District members. Our little town (Vista, California) is now a fearful place where Political Correctness carries more weight than having a roof that don't leak, a car that runs good, and if you want to get anything DONE you'd damn well better be able to speak Spanish because the local crop of youngsters willing and ABLE to tackle life's physical chores has vanished into the reality of computer games... played on machines they can't repair... and discussed via hunt & pecked messages because they can't touch-type. -Bob (who is still coming up with those Dreadful Projects... [the current acorn is how to build a cabinet that turns an inexpensive portable electric saw into an even less expensive Table Saw, needed to reduce scrap lumber to longerons and sticks for ribs and a hell of a lot of fun along the way.) But I fed you a clanger on the tubing, Harry. But I was afraid if I dug too deeply into the Nitty and the Gritty I'd soon find myself with no one to talk to :-) There's no shame in finding cheap materials for test coupons. I went and begged offcuts of muffler tube from the local shop. They didn't ask a whole lot of money. And I placed two stubs together with a little gap and MIG welded them up, one after another. This gave me a false sense of security - cos it was not at all difficult. The clean metal is such an overwhelming help! Exhaust tube is made from ERW steel (electrical resistance welded) - and you see the flash on the internal diameter. I am willing to accept that ERW is now as durable as cold drawn - the type formerly preferred for racing car space frames 'n' stuff..... Brian Whatcott Altus OK |
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