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Re: Europa-List: Tailplane design

Subject: Re: Europa-List: Tailplane design
From: Europa List <n914va@bvunet.net>
Date: Fri, 29 Jun 2007 13:10:25
No Brian, I was off on a stupid binge which was thankfully stopped by 
your comment. Never mind. Sometimes too much thinking leads me to 
fruitless thinking and time wasted on my part. 

N914VA
  ----- Original Message ----- 
  From: Brian Davies 
  To: europa-list@matronics.com 
  Sent: Friday, June 29, 2007 12:13 PM
  Subject: RE: Europa-List: Tailplane design


  Vaughn,

  Are you sure you mean TP6 retention?  My understanding is that a tight 
fit at TP6 is not desireable because it can transfer loads to TP6 if 
there is play at other points in the sytem and this can lead to TP6 
disbonding from the tail plane.

  Your method may be more appropriate at the TP12/ TP14 locations, which 
is, I suspect what you really meant.

  Regards

  Brian Davies


-------------------------------------------------------------------------
-----
  From: owner-europa-list-server@matronics.com 
[mailto:owner-europa-list-server@matronics.com] On Behalf Of Europa List
  Sent: 29 June 2007 15:45
  To: europa-list@matronics.com
  Subject: Europa-List: Tailplane design


  The person that started my kit did not have faith in the tail plane 
design, nor do I. He designed and built a pinned clamping system that 
fits inside the fuselage that would prevent any play from developing due 
to wear. I don't feel that the retention between TP-4 and Tp-6 tubes to 
be adequate because of the thin wall. If any play at all was present at 
assembly, it seems that the slight movement would increase the size of 
the holes to where it became excessive. I've attached a PDF file ofwhat 
I would like to do to change it, but am not sure that it can be done 
with 100% realiability. Maybe there are some engineers out there that 
can. The 3/8" modification has not been done, so the idea of drilling 
out slightly smaller than 3/8" and driving increasingly larger pins 
through to expand the holes to 3/8" while work hardening them seems to 
be my other recourse. BTW, my old Sears garden tractor used the same 
method of attaching the front axle to the frame as the present system of 
a pin through thin walled metal and assembly that had worn so badly in 
one year that it was hard to steer and impossible to mow evenly. I took 
the axle off and had a tube welded in it and collars welded to the frame 
and was able to get 8 years of satifactory service from it until the 
motor gave up.

  I have pictures of the clamp collars made and installed in my kit by 
the previous builder if anyone is interested.

  Vaughn Teegarden
  N914VA - no progress

  AVG Free Date: 28/06/2007 17:57


  28/06/2007 17:57



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