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Aircraft Hangar Door

 
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jbhart(at)onlyinternet.ne
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PostPosted: Sun May 15, 2011 2:33 pm    Post subject: Aircraft Hangar Door Reply with quote

Kolbers,

When I knew I was going to move from south east Missouri to east central
Indiana, I started looking for a new EAA Chapter home. One of the Chapters
I visited was located at Neil Armstrong Airport (KAXV) Wapakoneta, Ohio.
The second meeting (and last) I attended was at the home of John Hines, a
Kolb pilot, because he wanted to show off his new hangar.

I really liked his door, as I thought it was the simplest and lightest that
I had ever seen. He had purchased the plans and all the hardware and then he
assembled it on the ground inside the hangar. From Google I found the
current supplier of plans.

http://ultimatedoor.homestead.com/ultimate.html

Jack B. Hart FF004
Winchester, IN


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ceengland(at)bellsouth.ne
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PostPosted: Sun May 15, 2011 6:36 pm    Post subject: Aircraft Hangar Door Reply with quote

On 5/15/2011 5:32 PM, Jack B. Hart wrote:
Quote:


Kolbers,

When I knew I was going to move from south east Missouri to east central
Indiana, I started looking for a new EAA Chapter home. One of the Chapters
I visited was located at Neil Armstrong Airport (KAXV) Wapakoneta, Ohio.
The second meeting (and last) I attended was at the home of John Hines, a
Kolb pilot, because he wanted to show off his new hangar.

I really liked his door, as I thought it was the simplest and lightest that
I had ever seen. He had purchased the plans and all the hardware and then he
assembled it on the ground inside the hangar. From Google I found the
current supplier of plans.

http://ultimatedoor.homestead.com/ultimate.html

Jack B. Hart FF004
Winchester, IN
One of my neighbors has one. Works well using a Harbor Freight 12V worm

drive winch. The hardware kit was very complete, with everything
included except the wood, door skin structural framing for mounting the
tracks, pulleys, etc, and the winch.

Potential downsides: door opening must be high enough for the door to
hang under the opening, since the door partially retracts into the hangar;
for me at least, the installation is pretty complicated, with multiple
tracks similar to garage door guides and lots of pulleys that that must
be mounted to structure above & behind the door;
my neighbor built his using regular yellow pine, which is rather prone
to quick rot when used at grade level (IIRC, he said that the company
recommends against using treated lumber because of the extra weight);

Potential upsides: it can be opened with a simple hand cranked boat
winch, and if you install ballast weights on the cable, you can almost
open & close it without a winch;
you get the shade from roughly half the door remaining outside the hangar.

One thing to remember is that it's only the thickness of a 2x4 on edge.
If wind is a serious concern, it might have problems in heavy wind.

Charlie


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John Hauck



Joined: 09 Jan 2006
Posts: 4639
Location: Titus, Alabama (hauck's holler)

PostPosted: Sun May 15, 2011 6:48 pm    Post subject: Aircraft Hangar Door Reply with quote

my neighbor built his using regular yellow pine, which is rather prone
to quick rot when used at grade level (IIRC, he said that the company
recommends against using treated lumber because of the extra weight);

Charlie

Charlie E/Gang:

Treated lumber maintains the extra weight until it dries out. Then it
weighs the same as untreated lumber. It also shrinks up quite a bit as it
dries.

john h
mkIII
Titus, Alabama


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_________________
John Hauck
MKIII/912ULS
hauck's holler
Titus, Alabama
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jbhart(at)onlyinternet.ne
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PostPosted: Mon May 16, 2011 8:31 am    Post subject: Aircraft Hangar Door Reply with quote

At 09:31 PM 5/15/11 -0500, you wrote:
Quote:

Potential downsides: door opening must be high enough for the door to
hang under the opening, since the door partially retracts into the hangar;
for me at least, the installation is pretty complicated, with multiple
tracks similar to garage door guides and lots of pulleys that that must
be mounted to structure above & behind the door;
my neighbor built his using regular yellow pine, which is rather prone
to quick rot when used at grade level (IIRC, he said that the company
recommends against using treated lumber because of the extra weight);


Charlie,

This door needs only about five inches of overhead space in the actual door
opening. This is much less than the space required for a bifold door.
Since this door is lifed and balanced at mid level, there is no bending
moment applied to the side posts that carry the door weight. This means one
does not have to beef up the outside door posts as one would have to for a
bifold door.

For dry rot, it will last as long as the wood sealer holds up. One does not
have to put the bottom of the door on down to ground level. Only the
outside sheeting needs to come to ground level. The bottom door cross
stringer can be displaced up off the ground by bumpers to prevent it from
being in constant contact with moisture.

I am not selling this door, but I like the simplicity of the design. Not
much to go wrong. I am restoring an old post and beam barn and will be
using this design.

I thought the List was getting slow. No emails. Sent my self and email,
and it did not come through. Called the provider and after they did a
little tweaking, received 72 emails.

Weird weather. 90 degrees plus one day and the next it in the fourties. So
much rain, can't get the mowing done. And so much wind I am afraid to open
the sliding hangar doors.

Jack B. Hart FF004
Winchester, IN


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