Mary helped me prime the big pile of fuselage parts, which made it go a lot faster. This pile includes all the parts for both seats, the seat adjustment brackets that go on top of F-705, one of the two seat back braces, the F-6111 stiffeners, the forward tunnel cover, and the F-635 bellcrank.
Archive for the ‘Fuselage’ Category
Primed a bunch of parts
Saturday, March 18th, 2006Parts prep
Thursday, March 16th, 2006Finished deburring my giant pile of miscallenous parts tonight. Gonna try to get these all prepped and primed this weekend.
Made one seat back brace
Monday, March 13th, 2006All I got done tonight was fabricating one of the two seat back braces:
I used an instrument hole punch to make the optional lightening holes:
Made seats and tunnel cover
Saturday, March 11th, 2006I fabricated some big and small pieces from raw stock today – not a single prepunched hole to be found. First was the forward tunnel cover, which goes between the seats. For some reason this the only photo I took of it. It turned out pretty well, although if I were to make another one I'd do a better job on the fit between the diagonal forward surface of the side supports and the angled seat pans. You can see the gap that I ended up with, exaggerated in this photo because it's just sitting there loosely and isn't really being pressed down onto the surface.
Then it was on to the seats. You're basically given some corrugated alclad sheet and some angle and hinge stock, and told to go nuts. I trimmed all the angle stock to length, then cut these slots for the hinge with the bandsaw:
They don't tell you precisely where to drill every hole, so I clamped one of the angles to the seat back and marked rivet locations along the sides where they wouldn't interfere with the bent areas.
I drilled holes in the locations I marked, using a fence on the drill press to make a nice straight line. Then I progressively clamped one angle to another and match drilled until I had four side angles with identical rivet spacings. I did a similar thing for the top and bottom angles.
Much fitting and drilling later, here are the two seat backs ready for final drilling.
I'm thinking of just leaving them this way. I hear accupressure is good for the back.
Bandsaw
Tuesday, March 7th, 2006I broke down and bought a bandsaw:
I think this is the same $99 Delta unit that everybody else buys for their RV. I put a 15 TPI blade in it, and it cuts through aluminum like butta. I spent most of my limited evening fiddling around with the 972 little set screw adjustments on it, then used it to cut out these funky looking gussets:
I've got enough finished parts built up now that I can probably do a medium sized batch of fuselage riveting, once I do a medium sized batch of deburring, that is.