Eleven Days In

11/16/14

The FAA says amateur building is to be an educational process.  It sure is.  We are learning not only new mechanical skills but also new ways of thinking and communicating.

Left horizontal stabilizer skeleton.
Left horizontal stabilizer skeleton.

 

We are eleven days into the metalworking and have yet to set the first rivet.  The parts in Vans kit are formed and most holes punched, but they all require smoothing of edges, resizing of holes, deburring of drilled holes, etc.

Van’s construction instructions start off being very detailed.  We soon found that details are needed which are not in the instructions and only exist in the plan drawings.

 

 

Skin on and ready for match drilling of skin to rib and spar flanges.

 

We started drilling skins to the ribs following the instructions and not noting that the drawing wanted a smaller drill size than in the previous instruction.  A phone call to Vans gave relief.  It’s OK to use larger rivets (1/8 vs 3/32″) on the inboard rib providing edge clearance rules are not violated.  Fortunately our edge distances are OK.

 

 

One hole at a time.

As a result of my drilling snafoo we built a new rule.  Dolly and I will each independently read plans and instructions for any construction step. and come to a common understanding of what is to be done. Continue reading “Eleven Days In”

The Build Begins

10/27/14

The empennage has arrived

The empennage kit was ordered on October 16th, the Thursday before we left Michigan.  The kit  was shipped on the 20th and arrived in Florida three days later.   The boxes were kept closed while we finished construction of an EAA table.  A tool chest was found on Craigslist.  It was in good shape at a pawn shop.  Great deal.

Dolly has become “Chief Engineer” on the proect.  I couldn’t wouldn’t do it without her.

We unpacked Sunday evening the 25th.  Inventory started Monday morning.  We counted all the packages and parts, everything but the rivets.

imageReady to start the inventory.image