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#1
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Is there any scope for non-destructive testing by industrial
radiology? X-rays are sensitive in showing up minor ripples in children's bones? Would they work for the ripples in my spar? If so it might be financially viable. Alan |
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Alan Montague wrote:
Is there any scope for non-destructive testing by industrial radiology? X-rays are sensitive in showing up minor ripples in children's bones? Would they work for the ripples in my spar? There may well be alternative approaches, and that is why some of us (including owners of other legacy DG gliders, like myself) are a bit disturbed by the response of the DG factory. I don't expect them to pay for the repair (or even inspection) of a legacy design like the 300, but given that the original designer and many of the original engineers and technicians now work for the "new" DG, they have the resources necessary to find a better solution. In my mind, the reputations of the DG designers, engineers, and inspectors is at stake here, whether or not the current DG company feels they are obligated to take on any responsibility beyond issuing what they consider to be a suitable TN. If I were to buy a DG-808 now, why should I assume the factory won't issue a draconian TN and leave me hanging 5 or 10 years down the line? I again look at the Duo spar inspections as an example, the original protocol involved cutting holes in the wing skin and visually inspecting the spars, in short order SH evolved to using a borescope through the existing inspection ports and a few holes drilled in the root rib and aileron cutouts, eventually someone figured how to do it with inexpensive lipstick cameras and long rods. Marc |
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At 17:36 16 April 2007, Marc Ramsey wrote:
Alan Montague wrote: Is there any scope for non-destructive testing by industrial radiology? X-rays are sensitive in showing up minor ripples in children's bones? Would they work for the ripples in my spar? I would think that an ultrasonic inspection method could be developed for much less cost than radiography. Ultrasonic might be able to look into the layers of rovings and see how deep the undulations are. You might want to check with some companies which make composite aircraft and composite spars. Cirrus Design, Scaled Composites, Adam Aircraft etc..., and find out how they do NDT on their designs. I again look at the Duo spar inspections as an example, the original protocol involved cutting holes in the wing skin and visually inspecting the spars, in short order SH evolved to using a borescope through the existing inspection ports and a few holes drilled in the root rib and aileron cutouts, eventually someone figured how to do it with inexpensive lipstick cameras and long rods. Mark |
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At 17:36 16 April 2007, Marc Ramsey wrote:
Alan Montague wrote: Is there any scope for non-destructive testing by industrial radiology? X-rays are sensitive in showing up minor ripples in children's bones? Would they work for the ripples in my spar? I would think that an ultrasonic inspection method could be developed for much less cost than radiography. Ultrasonic might be able to look into the layers of rovings and see how deep the undulations are. You might want to check with some companies which make composite aircraft and composite spars. Cirrus Design, Scaled Composites, Adam Aircraft etc..., and find out how they do NDT on their designs. I again look at the Duo spar inspections as an example, the original protocol involved cutting holes in the wing skin and visually inspecting the spars, in short order SH evolved to using a borescope through the existing inspection ports and a few holes drilled in the root rib and aileron cutouts, eventually someone figured how to do it with inexpensive lipstick cameras and long rods. Mark |
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![]() Such a major flaw in a wing spar should be replaced at the manufacturers expense IMHO. It is inexcusable for these wings to still be allowed to fly at lower placarded limits as DG has no knowledge of the condition of the entire fleet. DG should sue Elan for screwing up and DG owners should get a free set of wings to replace the bad ones they bought in good faith. Its not like you can glue a new spar in the place where its bad!! Regards Al On Apr 16, 11:39 am, Steve Davis wrote: At 17:36 16 April 2007, Marc Ramsey wrote: Alan Montague wrote: Is there any scope for non-destructive testing by industrial radiology? X-rays are sensitive in showing up minor ripples in children's bones? Would they work for the ripples in my spar? I would think that an ultrasonic inspection method could be developed for much less cost than radiography. Ultrasonic might be able to look into the layers of rovings and see how deep the undulations are. You might want to check with some companies which make composite aircraft and composite spars. Cirrus Design, Scaled Composites, Adam Aircraft etc..., and find out how they do NDT on their designs.I again look at the Duo spar inspections as an example, the original protocol involved cutting holes in the wing skin and visually inspecting the spars, in short order SH evolved to using a borescope through the existing inspection ports and a few holes drilled in the root rib and aileron cutouts, eventually someone figured how to do it with inexpensive lipstick cameras and long rods. Mark |
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I have sent a email to the factory, with no reply.
I am guessing that it would cost me $21K USD to get my wings fixed. Does anyone have any idea on the cost of new wings from the factory? Would it be cheaper for me? Regards, John "XLT" |
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On Tue, 17 Apr 2007 01:39:59 +0100, John Schaffer
wrote: I have sent a email to the factory, with no reply. I am guessing that it would cost me $21K USD to get my wings fixed. Does anyone have any idea on the cost of new wings from the factory? Would it be cheaper for me? How often do you feel the need to fly with more than 450 kg and faster than 250 kph...? As long as you don't do that regularly, you can save a lot of money and simply apply the new restrictions to your airspeed indicator and POH. Bye Andreas |
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On Apr 17, 3:14 am, Andreas Maurer wrote:
On Tue, 17 Apr 2007 01:39:59 +0100, John Schaffer wrote: I have sent a email to the factory, with no reply. I am guessing that it would cost me $21K USD to get my wings fixed. Does anyone have any idea on the cost of new wings from the factory? Would it be cheaper for me? How often do you feel the need to fly with more than 450 kg and faster than 250 kph...? As long as you don't do that regularly, you can save a lot of money and simply apply the new restrictions to your airspeed indicator and POH. Bye Andreas Also, from your April 8 post: Apart from the max T/O weight (and the prohibition of aerobatics for the DG-303 Acro) none of this limitations is going to have any practical influence on aircraft handling, don't you agree? Andreas, do you own a DG-300? If not maybe you'd like to buy mine. I'm partly joking and partly serious with that comment. It's still a nice glider but it's not the glider I bought. Mine is not an acro but was approved for mild aerobatics and I did those aerobatics. I'll miss that. Also, I'd like to fly at 9.5 lbs/sq ft. or so sometimes. 525 kg isn't required for that but more than 450 kg is needed. With 450 kg only 9.0 is possible. The reduction in maneuvering speed is probably a bigger deal than Vne but I know people around here who have had trouble staying below 18,000 while at Vne. It's not very often though. ELAN seems to be the responsible party here. Are they still the same company? My understanding is they only split off the aviation division to form AMS but the original ELAN company is still the same. Please correct me if I'm wrong. Bob |
#9
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On Apr 16, 9:26 pm, "
wrote: Such a major flaw in a wing spar should be replaced at the manufacturers expense IMHO. This would bankrupt DG, which benefits no-one. It is inexcusable for these wings to still be allowed to fly at lower placarded limits as DG has no knowledge of the condition of the entire fleet. Well, they (and EASA) believe they've tested-to-destruction the worst case, and under the new placard speeds (which are hardly low; the DG300 always had a high VNE and rough air max) there's still the big safety margin demanded by the regulations. DG should sue Elan for screwing up and DG owners should get a free set of wings to replace the bad ones they bought in good faith. Its not like you can glue a new spar in the place where its bad!! The manufacturing screw-up happened too long ago for DG to sue Elan/ AMS (I get the impression they would if they could). Dan |
#10
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On Apr 16, 3:48 pm, "Dan G" wrote:
On Apr 16, 9:26 pm, " wrote: Such a major flaw in a wing spar should be replaced at the manufacturers expense IMHO. This would bankrupt DG, which benefits no-one. If Boeing shipped a plane that was discovered to have a flaw in it because their sub contractor failed to adhere to manufacturing specs or QA procedures, Boeing would fix the problem then deal with the sub. After all Boeing owns the paper for the sales contract. So what is different here? It is inexcusable for these wings to still be allowed to fly at lower placarded limits as DG has no knowledge of the condition of the entire fleet. Well, they (and EASA) believe they've tested-to-destruction the worst case, and under the new placard speeds (which are hardly low; the DG300 always had a high VNE and rough air max) there's still the big safety margin demanded by the regulations. No DG would like to think they have found the worst case. They dont know. It will only take one crusty in his DG flying the old placard speeds, making it clap hands and they are in a whole heap of trouble. DG should sue Elan for screwing up and DG owners should get a free set of wings to replace the bad ones they bought in good faith. Its not like you can glue a new spar in the place where its bad!! The manufacturing screw-up happened too long ago for DG to sue Elan/ AMS (I get the impression they would if they could). No the DG site says this applies to DG303-Acros too which are recent production. This is a nightmare for DG300/303 owners, I almost became an owner last summer as I was looking at a DG303 acro. As an aside I posted some DG300 wing cross section shots from the one that went in at Minden 10 years ago. you can see the build quality really clearly here. http://www.gliderforum.com/photos/ph...asp?albumid=55 Regards Al |
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