Fixed radio stack reinforcement

You might recall I was displeased with the way the audio panel wiring was impinged upon by the crosswise brace at the top of the radio stack. This weekend, I fixed that particular glitch by drilling out the rivets in the piece of angle across the top of the cutout in the subpanel, and very carefully enlarging the cutout by another half-inch. At various times I was going after the subpanel with a unibit, a cutoff wheel in a dremel, various files, and a scotchbrite wheel in a die grinder… luckily I managed to avoid nicking any of the hundred or so wires back there.

New reinforcement pieces were cobbled together out of various pieces of scrap I had laying around. Since I was working around a bunch of existing structure that couldn't be moved, it was kind of a puzzle figuring out the best way to get everything attached securely together.

Here's what the finished product looks like from the aft side. Compared to the previous version, the new brace is substantially higher. There is a 0.032" spacer between the angle and the subpanel, which is bent around underneath to form a kind of cable guide.

A little piece of scrap angle ties the new horizontal brace to the existing vertical piece. It's kind of cheesy, but it's plenty strong. There's plenty of room now for cables and connectors to pass through. You can also see that I had to use another screw and nut in the inboard hole, since there was no way to get a squeezer in there and I didn't want to risk smashing something delicate with the rivet gun.

I also changed the desiccant material in the engine dehydrator plugs again… the dark blue one is filled with fresh silica, and the other one is old. Later on I baked the old silica until it was the same color and the new stuff, and dumped it back into the container.