Archive for the ‘Firewall Forward’ Category

Finished intake air duct

Saturday, June 4th, 2011

The FWF portion of the airplane seems to involve doing a lot of work that advances things incrementally, but rarely reaches a "finished" state that lends itself to an interesting blog post. Thus, I've been working on various things for the last month that I haven't been doing a good job documenting. Time to get some of these pictures off the camera…

The flanges at the top of the intake air duct are riveted to some fairly thin fiberglass. This seems like an area where cracks could eventually develop, so I laid up a series of glass strips on the outside to reinforce it. After sanding the edge and cleaning up the holes, the air duct now has a "belt" around the top to help strengthen it.

I drilled a 3/16" hole at the low point of the air duct, to let water drain out in case the airplane gets rained on while parked outside. The engine won't be happy (and probably won't even start) if the intake is choked with water.

I countersunk the rivet holes on the inside of the duct (an angle drill once again proves invaluable here) and also dabbed a bit of epoxy/flox over the alternate air door rivets to encapsulate them and hopefully prevent cracking.

A couple coats of grey primer did wonders for the air duct's cosmetic appearance. It's still lumpy and covered with patches, but at least now it's all the same color.

Before riveting the flanges to the duct, I roughed up the mating surfaces and spread epoxy/flox between them, and allowed it to cure overnight while clecoed together. Same basic idea as with the cowl hinges.

Then I riveted the flanges to the duct, using countersunk closed-end rivets with small washers on the outside to prevent crushing the fiberglass. Van's sent me the wrong rivets initially, which caused another work stoppage while I got that sorted out.

Finally, the air duct is finished and ready to go on the airplane. But I won't install it permanently until I get the starter and alternator wiring sorted out, as it would just be in the way.

Air duct patches

Sunday, May 1st, 2011

The engine air duct had a big section cut away to make it fit next to the alternator, and also a couple smaller holes that I ground away before realizing that it's a better idea to cut the vestigial mounting lugs off the starter instead. These all need to be covered over, starting with the two smaller ones for reasons of finger-access. I laid up two plies of 8-ounce glass tape on the outside, let that cure, then followed up with two more plies on the inside. (that was probably overkill, three would likely have been enough here)

The larger opening at the end of the duct is big enough that it needed a form to hold the glass in its proper place while the glue dried. I glued a chunk of styrofoam in there to act as an in-place mold, and then sanded it to the desired shape.

I laid up three plies of glass on the outside:

When it's cool like it has been lately, I use a lamp as a directed heat source to help the epoxy cure faster:

Once the layup on the outside was dry, I poured acetone into the air duct and swirled it around until the foam was all dissolved, leaving only the fiberglass behind. Magic! Then I laid up a single ply of glass on the inside, to give it a bit more strength and to smooth out the rough surface left by the fairly coarse foam. This was tricky to do, as I had to reach my arm down from the wide end of the air duct and get glue all over my sleeve in the process. (if my wife is reading this, yes I did remember to change clothes first)

Once this is all dry, I'll sand off any rough edges – then there's just a few more chores before the air duct is finished.

Alternate air door

Sunday, May 1st, 2011

The factory provides parts to build an alternate air door, which can be opened in an emergency to provide an auxilliary source of air to keep the engine running if the normal engine air filter is blocked by ice, snow, debris, a bird strike, or something else. I don't particularly like the design, since it's kind of hokey and it is a one-shot deal that requires removal of the cowl to reset it, meaning you can't test it before takeoff. But, after several rounds of making cardboard prototypes I couldn't come up with a better one that would a) fit within the restricted space available, and b) not increase the risk of having the engine ingest metal parts if any part of the alternate air door assembly were to fail (talk about the cure being worse than the disease). Some people have omitted the alternate air door entirely, but I decided it would be a good idea to just install the factory kit as provided. Every certified airplane has to have one, after all, and most of the requirements in Part 23 exist for a reason.

I cut a hole in the side of the air duct in the specified location, and match drilled holes through the steel mounting ring. Per the plans, I angled it 10 degrees clockwise relative to the top of the air duct.

Using hand seamers, I folded the retaining tab at the top of the ring:

Then I crimped the forward end, which provides a stop for the door when it reaches the closed position:

The door itself is a piece of 0.063" alclad that pivots around a screw and is actuated by a pull cable. This is the open position:

And here's the closed position. It took a bit of grinding to get it to close securely and move without interference.

The surface of the air duct is not flat all the way across, so you have to build it up to match the mounting ring. I mixed up a big batch of epoxy and flox and laid down a fillet, trying to as much as possible to squeegee the excess material away from where I didn't want it to go – this stuff is tough as nails and therefore hard to sand.

Here's the end result of the first round of sanding. I wish Van's would modify their mold to have a flat-topped bump on the side for this thing – sure would be a lot easier (and lighter!) to do it that way.

As I did other stuff with fiberglass this weekend, I'd use the leftover epoxy from each work session to mix up some microballoons that I'd apply to the alternate air door here and there, just to make it look less nasty. I know it will be hidden under the cowling, but I would like it to at least be a little bit professional looking.

I installed the pop rivets and polished the heads smooth to keep them from hanging up the door, or pushing it outwards and causing a gap, aka an air leak.

Here's the finished product, minus the cable that will be installed later once I figure out where to put the cockpit control for it. It's pretty ugly right now, but it will look better with a coat of paint.

The old paper clip trick

Sunday, March 13th, 2011

Once the baffles are roughly trimmed far enough to generally fit under the top cowl, you then have to trim them further so you get a nice even gap all the way around the engine. I used the "old paper clip trick" to figure out what to trim and what to keep. I didn't invent this method, but here's how it works…

You start by putting a whole bunch of paper clips on top of the baffles. The jumbo size seems to work best.

Then, very carefully put the top cowl on, and push it down onto the paper clips. Here's a view of what's happening inside, looking in from the oil filler door:

This is another view looking aft from the spinner opening:

Then you carefully remove the cowl, and if you're lucky you're left with an impression of the inside face:

Mark a line the desired distance down from the top of the paper clips – without bumping them out of position! – and proceed to trim, file, and deburr.

Then, repeat a dozen more times! Seriously, I did this for hours, tweaking the fit a little more each time. The baffles came off and went back on many many times, which I didn't bother to take pictures of. But the finished product looks something like this:

Not a very interesting picture, I know. So here's a shot of the whole airplane with the cowl on, which is more fun to look at:

Baffle trimming

Monday, March 7th, 2011

It's finally time to start fitting the baffles to the top cowl. The upright baffle parts all start life being extra-tall, and then they get trimmed down so they end just short of the top cowl. You don't want too small of a gap between the fiberglass cowl and sheet metal, which could cause the shaking engine to damage the cowl; you also don't want too large a gap because it prevents the rubber air seal material from doing its job.

But, since the cowl isn't transparent, how do you know where to trim without a lot of tedious trial and error? I used a method suggested by someone else, which begins by using wood strips to elevate the top cowl some known distance above its usual position:

After making sure the gap is even at each corner, you then reach through the gap to trace the contour of the top cowl onto the baffles.

It just happened to work out that a popsicle stick is just the right length to give me a 3/8" offset from the inside cowl contour. I notched the end to locate the tip of a sharpie, then used this contraption to draw a line on the baffles inside the cowl.

This is a picture looking in one of the cowl inlets, showing the line I traced. This worked pretty well and wasn't too difficult, other than requiring some painful contortions to get the pen onto every corner of the baffles while working in a limited space.

After removing the top cowl, I retraced the wobbly line so I could see it while cutting:

Then I removed all the baffle parts (quite a chore).

This is the first time in quite a while that the engine has been baffle-less:

The bandsaw made quick work of the initial trim cuts. I stayed outside the line, since there is some error inherent in this process, and I didn't want to cut off too much too quickly.

Everything goes back on for fitting, for the nth time:

After only one cut, it almost fits! Still a little trimming left to do in the aft corners, where I had a hard time making sharpie marks.

Here's a view into the right inlet, with the top cowl in place. I'll have to trim the cylinder baffles down a lot further once I glue the upper inlet ducts in place, but that will come later. For now, I'm glad I haven't attached them yet, since they would just be in the way.

Next: Yet more trimming…