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Cracked Canopy
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steve.freeman(at)syntaxds
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PostPosted: Sun Dec 25, 2011 1:52 pm    Post subject: Cracked Canopy Reply with quote

Hi Guys,

We have all heard this story before…While installing the rear canopy on my 650 I got about a 3” crack. I stop drilled it and I am trying to decide if I can live with this or not. Roughly $650 to get a new canopy seems like a lot of money and I might wind up with the same thing again. Honestly, I am not sure how this happened. I was being super careful and I was not drilling in a location where there seemed to be any pressure. Well…it happened…It sucks but I have to move on.

Can any of you guys make recommendations for the best practice to repair the crack? I know it will never be perfect but I have heard some people have had a lot of luck. There are no spider web cracks. Just the one, it is clean and like I said I stop drilled it at the end. I have found a couple of products on AC Spruce, in particular INSTA-WELD but it says to clamp the parts together…this is not possible. Also, if I use some type of adhesive that will wick in to the crack, do I then use some type of epoxy to fill the stop drill hole?

Any help is always appreciated…

I hope everyone is having a great Christmas!

Steve
0235 Mounted will start wiring soon.
Moving along with fuselage..
[quote][b]


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Ron Lendon



Joined: 10 Jan 2006
Posts: 685
Location: Clinton Twp., MI

PostPosted: Sun Dec 25, 2011 5:53 pm    Post subject: Re: Cracked Canopy Reply with quote

Hey Steve,

Bryan Martin had that happen to his also and he used methyl Ethel, something or other, to repair the crack after stop drilling.

He monitors this list, perhaps he will reply. Otherwise, just look up his posts and you just might find how he did it.


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_________________
Ron Lendon
WW Corvair with Roy's Garage 5th bearing
CH 601 XLB
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davgray(at)sbcglobal.net
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PostPosted: Sun Dec 25, 2011 8:17 pm    Post subject: Cracked Canopy Reply with quote

This might be a good thread to pursue as it seems to happen too often.
I would like to hear from others that cracked a canopy. Details of drill type and size, temperature at time of drilling, and hole-to-edge distance.
Also, from those that did not have this problem..
I used a step drill, warmed the canopy over a warm air register, let the bit generate a little heat from friction as it cut, kept the drill perpendicular to the surface,
and did not accept the 7 mm edge distance that would have occurred on a few of my holes if I stuck entirely with the plans.
My closest edge distance is 27 mm after a small modification. Five years plus without any cracks.

Gary Ray
Zenith 601XL-B, William Wynne Corvair 0.060 over, Roy's 5th bearing,
Mark's Falcon Heads, Marvel Schebler MA3-SPA Carburetor, 175 Hrs TT


From: Steve Freeman (steve.freeman(at)syntaxds.com)
Sent: Sunday, December 25, 2011 4:49 PM
To: zenith-list(at)matronics.com (zenith-list(at)matronics.com)
Subject: Cracked Canopy



Hi Guys,

We have all heard this story before…While installing the rear canopy on my 650 I got about a 3” crack. I stop drilled it and I am trying to decide if I can live with this or not. Roughly $650 to get a new canopy seems like a lot of money and I might wind up with the same thing again. Honestly, I am not sure how this happened. I was being super careful and I was not drilling in a location where there seemed to be any pressure. Well…it happened…It sucks but I have to move on.

Can any of you guys make recommendations for the best practice to repair the crack? I know it will never be perfect but I have heard some people have had a lot of luck. There are no spider web cracks. Just the one, it is clean and like I said I stop drilled it at the end. I have found a couple of products on AC Spruce, in particular INSTA-WELD but it says to clamp the parts together…this is not possible. Also, if I use some type of adhesive that will wick in to the crack, do I then use some type of epoxy to fill the stop drill hole?

Any help is always appreciated…

I hope everyone is having a great Christmas!

Steve
0235 Mounted will start wiring soon.
Moving along with fuselage..
[quote]

href="http://www.aeroelectric.com">www.aeroelectric.com
href="http://www.buildersbooks.com">www.buildersbooks.com
href="http://www.homebuilthelp.com">www.homebuilthelp.com
href="http://www.matronics.com/contribution">http://www.matronics.com/chref="http://www.matronics.com/Navigator?Zenith-List">http://www.matronhref="http://forums.matronics.com">http://forums.matronics.com
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jaybannist(at)cs.com
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PostPosted: Mon Dec 26, 2011 7:28 am    Post subject: Cracked Canopy Reply with quote

I did my canopy fabrication in the Summer (on purpose). Cold plastic is anxious to crack. I drilled the pilot holes for clecoes with a new drill bit that had about a 45 deg angle on the tip. I used that bit to drill right through the plastic into the bow. When I drilled the pilot holes out with a step drill bit for the washers, I got no cracking. I drilled one pilot hole way too close to the cut-out for the latch handle. I made a note to myself oi not use this hole. A year later when I went to fasten the bubble to the frame, I completely forgot that note and put a cleco in that hole. CRACK !! I quickly stop drilled the crack, but it kept running. I stop drilled again and it kept running. I finally stop drilled about a half inch beyond the end of the crack and that stopped it. In the end, I was able to cut the crack out to install a plastic air vent; so I never attempted to repair the crack. I did use one or two washers between the plastic and the bow at a couple of holes near the ends of the rear bow to insure that the screws didn't stress the plastic.

Jay






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bryanmmartin



Joined: 10 Jan 2006
Posts: 1018

PostPosted: Mon Dec 26, 2011 7:55 am    Post subject: Cracked Canopy Reply with quote

I had some small cracks from my drilling. I applied some methylene chloride with an insulin syringe. It wicked into the cracks and sealed them. I made sure to wipe off the excess immediately. The stuff works by dissolving the edges of the crack and fusing them together as it evaporates.

The water thin adhesive from ACS should work as well, it's probably the same ingredient. I didn't worry about the stop holes because they are hidden by the lower flashing. A little dab of Shoe-Goo or something similar might plug the hole.

On Dec 25, 2011, at 4:49 PM, Steve Freeman wrote:

Quote:

Can any of you guys make recommendations for the best practice to repair the crack? I know it will never be perfect but I have heard some people have had a lot of luck. There are no spider web cracks. Just the one, it is clean and like I said I stop drilled it at the end. I have found a couple of products on AC Spruce, in particular INSTA-WELD but it says to clamp the parts togetherthis is not possible. Also, if I use some type of adhesive that will wick in to the crack, do I then use some type of epoxy to fill the stop drill hole?

--
Bryan Martin
N61BM, CH 601 XL,
RAM Subaru, Stratus re-drive.


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jlatimer1(at)cox.net
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PostPosted: Mon Dec 26, 2011 5:15 pm    Post subject: Cracked Canopy Reply with quote

Steve,
Sounds like you are making steady progress. Still plan on a trip to DVT to see your project.

I have a crack in my HDS canopy. It is more than 3inches long. I stopped drilled then applied a strip of "Slap Stix". Glide pilots have used it for years. It works fine. The plane has 130 hours on it and no problem.

Here is a link to where I ordered it.

http://www.skysailing.com/pages/slapstix.htm

Jerry
Flying and having a great time.

From: owner-zenith-list-server(at)matronics.com [mailto:owner-zenith-list-server(at)matronics.com] On Behalf Of Steve Freeman
Sent: Sunday, December 25, 2011 2:49 PM
To: zenith-list(at)matronics.com
Subject: Cracked Canopy


Hi Guys,

We have all heard this story before…While installing the rear canopy on my 650 I got about a 3” crack. I stop drilled it and I am trying to decide if I can live with this or not. Roughly $650 to get a new canopy seems like a lot of money and I might wind up with the same thing again. Honestly, I am not sure how this happened. I was being super careful and I was not drilling in a location where there seemed to be any pressure. Well…it happened…It sucks but I have to move on.

Can any of you guys make recommendations for the best practice to repair the crack? I know it will never be perfect but I have heard some people have had a lot of luck. There are no spider web cracks. Just the one, it is clean and like I said I stop drilled it at the end. I have found a couple of products on AC Spruce, in particular INSTA-WELD but it says to clamp the parts together…this is not possible. Also, if I use some type of adhesive that will wick in to the crack, do I then use some type of epoxy to fill the stop drill hole?

Any help is always appreciated…

I hope everyone is having a great Christmas!

Steve
0235 Mounted will start wiring soon.
Moving along with fuselage..
[quote][b]


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Afterfxllc(at)aol.com
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PostPosted: Tue Dec 27, 2011 5:10 am    Post subject: Cracked Canopy Reply with quote

Guys

I found the reason for all this cracking canopy phenomenon. What I found was Zenith says to drill do a specific size (which I don't know off the top of my head) but what I found was it wasn't big enough for the counter sunk washer so when pressure is applied it exerts force around the hole thus a crack. The fix is simple (and I have never cracked a canopy) is..... Use a step bit to drill the canopy because it can't grab like a regular bit WILL. Then make the holes big enough that the counter sunk washer is loose that way the washer will rest on the rails and not be exerting outward pressure on the hole which WILL crack the canopy eventually.

Happy building
Jeff

In a message dated 12/25/2011 11:18:16 P.M. Eastern Standard Time, davgray(at)sbcglobal.net writes:
Quote:
This might be a good thread to pursue as it seems to happen too often.
I would like to hear from others that cracked a canopy. Details of drill type and size, temperature at time of drilling, and hole-to-edge distance.
Also, from those that did not have this problem..
I used a step drill, warmed the canopy over a warm air register, let the bit generate a little heat from friction as it cut, kept the drill perpendicular to the surface,
and did not accept the 7 mm edge distance that would have occurred on a few of my holes if I stuck entirely with the plans.
My closest edge distance is 27 mm after a small modification. Five years plus without any cracks.

Gary Ray
Zenith 601XL-B, William Wynne Corvair 0.060 over, Roy's 5th bearing,
Mark's Falcon Heads, Marvel Schebler MA3-SPA Carburetor, 175 Hrs TT


From: Steve Freeman (steve.freeman(at)syntaxds.com)
Sent: Sunday, December 25, 2011 4:49 PM
To: zenith-list(at)matronics.com (zenith-list(at)matronics.com)
Subject: Cracked Canopy



Hi Guys,

We have all heard this story before…While installing the rear canopy on my 650 I got about a 3” crack. I stop drilled it and I am trying to decide if I can live with this or not. Roughly $650 to get a new canopy seems like a lot of money and I might wind up with the same thing again. Honestly, I am not sure how this happened. I was being super careful and I was not drilling in a location where there seemed to be any pressure. Well…it happened…It sucks but I have to move on.

Can any of you guys make recommendations for the best practice to repair the crack? I know it will never be perfect but I have heard some people have had a lot of luck. There are no spider web cracks. Just the one, it is clean and like I said I stop drilled it at the end. I have found a couple of products on AC Spruce, in particular INSTA-WELD but it says to clamp the parts together…this is not possible. Also, if I use some type of adhesive that will wick in to the crack, do I then use some type of epoxy to fill the stop drill hole?

Any help is always appreciated…

I hope everyone is having a great Christmas!

Steve
0235 Mounted will start wiring soon.
Moving along with fuselage..
Quote:


href="http://www.aeroelectric.com">www.aeroelectric.com
href="http://www.buildersbooks.com">www.buildersbooks.com
href="http://www.homebuilthelp.com">www.homebuilthelp.com
href="http://www.matronics.com/contribution">http://www.matronics.com/chref="http://www.matronics.com/Navigator?Zenith-List">http://www.matronhref="http://forums.matronics.com">http://forums.matronics.com
href="http://www.matronics.com/contribution">http://www.matronics.com/c


tp://www.aeroelectric.com/">www.aeroelectric.com
/ href="http://www.buildersbooks.com/">www.buildersbooks.com
http://www.homebuilthelp.com/">www.homebuilthelp.com
p://www.matronics.com/contribution">http://www.matronics.com/contribution
ef="http://www.matronics.com/Navigator?Zenith-List">http://www.matronics.com/Navigator?Zenith-List
s.matronics.com/">http://forums.matronics.com
p://www.matronics.com/contribution">http://www.matronics.com/contribution


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foxatgibsons(at)gmail.com
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PostPosted: Tue Dec 27, 2011 10:39 am    Post subject: Cracked Canopy Reply with quote

hello builders

take a really {40-100x} close look at any hole drilled in any lexan /poly
sheet and if one used a regular or even a ultra sharp bit you should see a
dozen or so very tiny cracks that appear at the boundary area {clear to
opaque} i believe to avoid this propagating in to a crack later
you must
1. drill in steps
2 ream or melt to the proper size
3 inspect to see if the cracks are gone
4 slightly break the edges
5 make sure the fastener does not contact the sheet plastic on the inside
of the hole{ allow for the thermal and vibration stress }

take a really close look at any hole you drill in plastic sheets and what
appears to be perfect
still has the cracks
it has to be viewed with a loupe at least 40 power and they are on the
bottom only
cheers Peter
Fox
On Tue, Dec 27, 2011 at 5:08 AM, <Afterfxllc(at)aol.com> wrote:

[quote] **
Guys

I found the reason for all this cracking canopy phenomenon. What I found
was Zenith says to drill do a specific size (which I don't know off the
top of my head) but what I found was it wasn't big enough for the counter
sunk washer so when pressure is applied it exerts force around the hole
thus a crack. The fix is simple (and I have never cracked a canopy) is....
Use a step bit to drill the canopy because it can't grab like a regular bit
WILL. Then make the holes big enough that the counter sunk washer is loose
that way the washer will rest on the rails and not be exerting outward
pressure on the hole which WILL crack the canopy eventually.

Happy building
Jeff

In a message dated 12/25/2011 11:18:16 P.M. Eastern Standard Time,
davgray(at)sbcglobal.net writes:

This might be a good thread to pursue as it seems to happen too often.
I would like to hear from others that cracked a canopy. Details of drill
type and size, temperature at time of drilling, and hole-to-edge distance


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bryanmmartin



Joined: 10 Jan 2006
Posts: 1018

PostPosted: Wed Dec 28, 2011 1:00 pm    Post subject: Cracked Canopy Reply with quote

The canopy is made of acrylic (Plexiglas), It must be handled with extreme care, it is very easy to crack.

Polycarbonate (Lexan) is very forgiving. You can treat it like plywood as far as cutting and drilling are concerned. It's almost impossible to crack.

Lexan is much more expensive than Plexiglas, which is one reason it's not used in the canopy.
On Dec 27, 2011, at 1:37 PM, Peter Fox wrote:

Quote:
hello builders

take a really {40-100x} close look at any hole drilled in any lexan /poly sheet and if one used a regular or even a ultra sharp bit you should see a dozen or so very tiny cracks that appear at the boundary area {clear to opaque} i believe to avoid this propagating in to a crack later
you must
1. drill in steps
2 ream or melt to the proper size
3 inspect to see if the cracks are gone
4 slightly break the edges
5 make sure the fastener does not contact the sheet plastic on the inside of the hole{ allow for the thermal and vibration stress }

--
Bryan Martin
N61BM, CH 601 XL,
RAM Subaru, Stratus re-drive.
do not archive.


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Bryan Martin
N61BM, CH 601 XL, Stratus Subaru.
do not archive.
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Scotsman



Joined: 27 Aug 2007
Posts: 89
Location: Johannesburg, South Africa

PostPosted: Thu Dec 29, 2011 5:14 am    Post subject: Re: Cracked Canopy Reply with quote

hi guys, I had received advice to blunt the drill bit so that it grinds as opposed to bites into the material. Some of the local guys referred me to this US video on the subject.

http://www.eaavideo.org/video.aspx?v=1200008869001

I have not tried it yet but believe that it may be correct as my second crack in the canopy occurred with almost no pressure and a brand new unused high quality drill bit.

I would be interested to hear your thoughts on it.

Cheers
James


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jaybannist(at)cs.com
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PostPosted: Thu Dec 29, 2011 5:43 am    Post subject: Cracked Canopy Reply with quote

James,

I used a very sharp pointed drill bit to drill pilot holes. This bit was recommended for drilling acrylic plastic and it worked well for me. Others have recommended a really flat point drill bit. That tells me that either pointed or flat is OK, but not in between, ie "normal" bits. I was able to drill right through the plastic and into the aluminum tube, which you probably couldn't do with the flat pointed bit.

Jay






--


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psm(at)att.net
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PostPosted: Thu Dec 29, 2011 6:13 am    Post subject: Cracked Canopy Reply with quote

Hi Guys,

The classic trick for drilling acrylic is to reduce the "Rake" on the drill bits used. This means the bit cannot bite into the plastic but rather takes either a very shallow chip or just melts through the plastic.

I hand grind my own drill points, so it is easy for me to reduce the rake to zero on drills for acrylic. I'm not sure that is what I did. Instead, What I tend to do is to use a very slow speed on my battery powered drill and also I tend to use step drills for this kind of drilling. Step drilling can be done either by using a store bought step drill (looks like a Christmas tree) or buy using steps of drill size so you are only taking a small bite out of the existing hole to enlarge it a little bit.

The reduced rake trick can be simulated by running the drill backwards. This ensures you don't take any bite at all out of the plastic but melt your way through. It is an extreme approach, but works just fine.

Paul
Camas, WA

On 12/29/2011 5:40 AM, Jay Bannister wrote: [quote]James,

I used a very sharp pointed drill bit to drill pilot holes. This bit was recommended for drilling acrylic plastic and it worked well for me. Others have recommended a really flat point drill bit. That tells me that either pointed or flat is OK, but not in between, ie "normal" bits. I was able to drill right through the plastic and into the aluminum tube, which you probably couldn't do with the flat pointed bit.

Jay






-----Original Message-----
From: Scotsman <james.Roberts(at)standardbank.co.za> (james.Roberts(at)standardbank.co.za)
To: zenith-list <zenith-list(at)matronics.com> (zenith-list(at)matronics.com)
Sent: Thu, Dec 29, 2011 7:20 am
Subject: Re: Cracked Canopy

Quote:
--> Zenith-List message posted by: "Scotsman" <james.Roberts(at)standardbank.co.za (james.Roberts(at)standardbank.co.za)>

hi guys, I had received advice to blunt the drill bit so that it grinds as
opposed to bites into the material. Some of the local guys referred me to this
US video on the subject.

http://www.eaavideo.org/video.aspx?v=1200008869001

I have not tried it yet but believe that it may be correct as my second crack in
the canopy occurred with almost no pressure and a brand new unused high quality
drill bit.

I would be interested to hear your thoughts on it.

Cheers
James

--------
Cell +27 83 675 0815


Read this topic online here:

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PostPosted: Thu Dec 29, 2011 6:39 am    Post subject: Cracked Canopy Reply with quote

Hi Guys,

I have seen many notes on this topic suggesting “step drills” (are we talking about a Uni-Bit) but I have never seen a step drill small enough for the holes required for the canopy. Can anyone provide a link to where I can find a small hole step drill?

When my canopy cracked I don’t think it had anything to do with the bit I was using. What I “think” happened is a small piece of debris got trapped between the glass and the rear canopy flashing which caused a pressure point. As I drilled this caused a small lever point and the canopy cracked at that point. I suspect this is the case because when I examined the location a small bead of plastic (but big enough to do the job) fell from the space between the canopy and the flashing. Until that point and at all points after the drilling was not an issue but I will admit I am nervous about enlarging the holes to accept the hardware.

Steve

From: owner-zenith-list-server(at)matronics.com [mailto:owner-zenith-list-server(at)matronics.com] On Behalf Of Paul Mulwitz
Sent: Thursday, December 29, 2011 7:11 AM
To: zenith-list(at)matronics.com
Subject: Re: Re: Cracked Canopy

Hi Guys,

The classic trick for drilling acrylic is to reduce the "Rake" on the drill bits used. This means the bit cannot bite into the plastic but rather takes either a very shallow chip or just melts through the plastic.

I hand grind my own drill points, so it is easy for me to reduce the rake to zero on drills for acrylic. I'm not sure that is what I did. Instead, What I tend to do is to use a very slow speed on my battery powered drill and also I tend to use step drills for this kind of drilling. Step drilling can be done either by using a store bought step drill (looks like a Christmas tree) or buy using steps of drill size so you are only taking a small bite out of the existing hole to enlarge it a little bit.

The reduced rake trick can be simulated by running the drill backwards. This ensures you don't take any bite at all out of the plastic but melt your way through. It is an extreme approach, but works just fine.

Paul
Camas, WA

On 12/29/2011 5:40 AM, Jay Bannister wrote:
James,

I used a very sharp pointed drill bit to drill pilot holes. This bit was recommended for drilling acrylic plastic and it worked well for me. Others have recommended a really flat point drill bit. That tells me that either pointed or flat is OK, but not in between, ie "normal" bits. I was able to drill right through the plastic and into the aluminum tube, which you probably couldn't do with the flat pointed bit.

Jay






--


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larrycmcfarland(at)gmail.
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PostPosted: Thu Dec 29, 2011 7:02 am    Post subject: Cracked Canopy Reply with quote

Paul,
You can find a small Uni-Bit drill at Harbor Freight. See link.
These work very well in canopy plastics.
http://www.harborfreight.com/catalogsearch/result?keyword=unibit

Larry McFarland 601HDS at www.macsmachine.com

From: owner-zenith-list-server(at)matronics.com [mailto:owner-zenith-list-server(at)matronics.com] On Behalf Of Steve Freeman
Sent: Thursday, December 29, 2011 8:37 AM
To: zenith-list(at)matronics.com
Subject: RE: Re: Cracked Canopy

Hi Guys,

I have seen many notes on this topic suggesting “step drills” (are we talking about a Uni-Bit) but I have never seen a step drill small enough for the holes required for the canopy. Can anyone provide a link to where I can find a small hole step drill?

When my canopy cracked I don’t think it had anything to do with the bit I was using. What I “think” happened is a small piece of debris got trapped between the glass and the rear canopy flashing which caused a pressure point. As I drilled this caused a small lever point and the canopy cracked at that point. I suspect this is the case because when I examined the location a small bead of plastic (but big enough to do the job) fell from the space between the canopy and the flashing. Until that point and at all points after the drilling was not an issue but I will admit I am nervous about enlarging the holes to accept the hardware.

Steve

From: owner-zenith-list-server(at)matronics.com (owner-zenith-list-server(at)matronics.com) [mailto:owner-zenith-list-server(at)matronics.com] ([email][mailto:owner-zenith-list-server(at)matronics.com][/email]) On Behalf Of Paul Mulwitz
Sent: Thursday, December 29, 2011 7:11 AM
To: zenith-list(at)matronics.com (zenith-list(at)matronics.com)
Subject: Re: Re: Cracked Canopy

Hi Guys,

The classic trick for drilling acrylic is to reduce the "Rake" on the drill bits used. This means the bit cannot bite into the plastic but rather takes either a very shallow chip or just melts through the plastic.

I hand grind my own drill points, so it is easy for me to reduce the rake to zero on drills for acrylic. I'm not sure that is what I did. Instead, What I tend to do is to use a very slow speed on my battery powered drill and also I tend to use step drills for this kind of drilling. Step drilling can be done either by using a store bought step drill (looks like a Christmas tree) or buy using steps of drill size so you are only taking a small bite out of the existing hole to enlarge it a little bit.

The reduced rake trick can be simulated by running the drill backwards. This ensures you don't take any bite at all out of the plastic but melt your way through. It is an extreme approach, but works just fine.

Paul
Camas, WA

On 12/29/2011 5:40 AM, Jay Bannister wrote:
James,

I used a very sharp pointed drill bit to drill pilot holes. This bit was recommended for drilling acrylic plastic and it worked well for me. Others have recommended a really flat point drill bit. That tells me that either pointed or flat is OK, but not in between, ie "normal" bits. I was able to drill right through the plastic and into the aluminum tube, which you probably couldn't do with the flat pointed bit.

Jay






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PostPosted: Thu Dec 29, 2011 7:38 am    Post subject: Cracked Canopy Reply with quote

Steve,

I used a small regular well used dull bit (#20 I think) to drill the pilot holes and then a Uni Bit to enlarge the holes for the mounting hardware.

Jerry


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PostPosted: Thu Dec 29, 2011 8:24 am    Post subject: Cracked Canopy Reply with quote

Steve,

The final size of the holes in the plastic canopy is around 3/8 inch. This allows the tinnerman washers to rest on the flat flange to hold the canopy in place. The angled (cone) shape of the tinnerman washer holds the canopy approximately in place while allowing a little movement as temperature changes create different expansion in the plastic and metal parts.

I've never seen a step drill that was so large it couldn't enlarge a hole from #40 to 3/8 inch. I tend to use ones from Harbor Freight because I'm too cheap to buy the expensive Unibits.

Paul
Camas, WA

On 12/29/2011 6:37 AM, Steve Freeman wrote: [quote]

I have seen many notes on this topic suggesting “step drills” (are we talking about a Uni-Bit) but I have never seen a step drill small enough for the holes required for the canopy. Can anyone provide a link to where I can find a small hole step drill? [b]


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PostPosted: Thu Dec 29, 2011 9:54 am    Post subject: Cracked Canopy Reply with quote

do not archive

Hello Listers:

Attached is the drill geometry LP Plastics, the people who make the windows, suggest.

The important part is the "dubbing" of the cutting lip rake angle. An off the shelf drill has a positive cutting lip angle which will "dig" into soft materials like brass, AL, or plexi. By dubbing the rake angle to "0" or a slightly negative angle, the cutting edge "scrapes" the material in front of it rather than digging in which is what cracks plexi. Since this scraping action does not result in the drill self feeding or pulling itsself into the material, it only cuts by you applying pressure. Dub the cutting edge, apply pressure judiciously, and always back up the work with a piece of wood so the drill doesn't burst through upon penetration.

The drill still "drills" the hole by removing meteral, it doesn't burn through it. To see many other diagrams to clarify, Google search "drill dubbing", lots comes up.

RE Lexan: Arn't there two very good reasons Lexan isn't used for aircraft cabin windows?

1. It scratches much easier than plexi.

2. And more importantly, it's what is used for bullet proof and shatter proof glass, so in a crash, rescuers can't break through to get occupants out, that's especially bad if there's a fire!

Regards,

Randy, Las Vegas


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PostPosted: Thu Dec 29, 2011 10:26 am    Post subject: Cracked Canopy Reply with quote

Hi Randy,

Mostly the reason for not using Lexan (polycarbonate) on home built airplanes is the expense.

You are correct that it is soft and scratches easily. For that reason it is necessary to "Hard Coat" it with polyurethane in any normal application. This solves the scratch problem but adds cost. You can get an idea of the cost increment if you go to your local eyeglasses store. They charge a significant increment price for polycarbonate lenses over standard (mostly acrylic) lenses. Even in small quantities this is often a $50 increment.

I don't understand the issue of being "Bullet Proof". In reality it is just as easy, maybe easier, to hack away at Lexan as Plexiglass.

Best regards,

Paul
Camas, WA

On 12/29/2011 9:48 AM, Randy L. Thwing wrote: [quote] RE Lexan: Arn't there two very good reasons Lexan isn't used for aircraft cabin windows?

1. It scratches much easier than plexi.

2. And more importantly, it's what is used for bullet proof and shatter proof glass, so in a crash, rescuers can't break through to get occupants out, that's especially bad if there's a fire!

[b]


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PostPosted: Thu Dec 29, 2011 10:36 am    Post subject: Cracked Canopy Reply with quote

A 1/4" thickness will stop a 38 caliber ,sounds bullet proof to me . Wade
[quote] ---


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PostPosted: Thu Dec 29, 2011 10:58 am    Post subject: Cracked Canopy Reply with quote

Hi Paul,

Thanks for the input. I was thinking of the original pilot hole not the finished hole size. Thanks for clarifying.

Steve

From: owner-zenith-list-server(at)matronics.com [mailto:owner-zenith-list-server(at)matronics.com] On Behalf Of Paul Mulwitz
Sent: Thursday, December 29, 2011 9:21 AM
To: zenith-list(at)matronics.com
Subject: Re: Re: Cracked Canopy

Steve,

The final size of the holes in the plastic canopy is around 3/8 inch. This allows the tinnerman washers to rest on the flat flange to hold the canopy in place. The angled (cone) shape of the tinnerman washer holds the canopy approximately in place while allowing a little movement as temperature changes create different expansion in the plastic and metal parts.

I've never seen a step drill that was so large it couldn't enlarge a hole from #40 to 3/8 inch. I tend to use ones from Harbor Freight because I'm too cheap to buy the expensive Unibits.

Paul
Camas, WA

On 12/29/2011 6:37 AM, Steve Freeman wrote:
I have seen many notes on this topic suggesting “step drills” (are we talking about a Uni-Bit) but I have never seen a step drill small enough for the holes required for the canopy. Can anyone provide a link to where I can find a small hole step drill?
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