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Wings and Rivets

 
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backstagelive(at)gmail.co
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PostPosted: Tue May 24, 2011 10:43 am    Post subject: Wings and Rivets Reply with quote

Hey Guys,

I have 2 questions I would like to ask.

1) Rivets. Do the rivets we use have any kind of aircraft designation to
them as far as a mil spec part number or universal part number, or are they
propriatary Zenith parts only. I have never seen them in a Wicks or Aircraft
Spruce catalog. Does anyone know where these rivets come from and what they
are officially called?

2) Wings. My wings and my center section are upgraded and finished, and
ready to be put back in the airplane. this plane was 3/4 finished when the
upgrade was announced so the wings have never been attached. I want to make
sure there will be no surprises when I attach the wings, so I am looking for
some advise. There are ditfferent ways to approach this problem and I would
like to find out how you guys that have attached your wings did it. The wing
attach holes have not been opened up to the final bolt size yet. I was
thinking of taking the center section and attaching it to the wings out of
the airplane and reaming the holes, or I could ream the holes in the center
section to the final size and install the center section on the plane now,
then put the wings on the plane and re-ream the holes to fit. That seems to
be a more precise way of doing it because it would make sure the dihedral is
set perfectly on both wings. Or I could just put in the center section now
and ream the center section and wing spar together at the end of
construction. My question is, did anyone ream the wings and center section
together, how hard was it to do, is there enough room in the cockpit to do a
decent job, and if you had to do it over again, how would you do it?

Thanks.

Joe in Oshkosh


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psm(at)att.net
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PostPosted: Tue May 24, 2011 11:21 am    Post subject: Wings and Rivets Reply with quote

Hi Joe,

I understand the rivets sold by ZAC are made by a South American
(Brazil?) company called Avex. They are not mil. spec. and indeed are
not considered structural rivets. The story I've heard is that Zenith
tests each batch to insure they are actually better than the
manufacturer guarantees. You can get them from other sources, but then
you face the question of just how good the ones you get are.

I have mounted my wings twice now and the first time was a disaster.
That time I kept enlarging the holes to get them to line up while the
wings were attached. This is nearly impossible to do well because the
cabin side interferes with the outer holes and the seat bottom
interferes with all the holes when you try to drill or ream them.

This time I had the carry through removed and carefully fitted all 12
bolts to the structure. I tried reaming at first but decided drilling
with small steps works better for me. The spar end is so thick that it
is difficult to get a reamer to go straight while a drill bit naturally
finds the hole center. If I drilled using every incremental size drill
of a "Letter" set I found I got very nice holes with little real skill
on my part.

Good luck,

Paul
XL just mounting wings - for the last time -- I hope.
On 5/24/2011 11:40 AM, Joe wrote:
Quote:


Hey Guys,

I have 2 questions I would like to ask.

1) Rivets. Do the rivets we use have any kind of aircraft designation
to them as far as a mil spec part number or universal part number, or
are they propriatary Zenith parts only. I have never seen them in a
Wicks or Aircraft Spruce catalog. Does anyone know where these rivets
come from and what they are officially called?

2) Wings. My wings and my center section are upgraded and finished,
and ready to be put back in the airplane. this plane was 3/4 finished
when the upgrade was announced so the wings have never been attached.
I want to make sure there will be no surprises when I attach the
wings, so I am looking for some advise. There are ditfferent ways to
approach this problem and I would like to find out how you guys that
have attached your wings did it. The wing attach holes have not been
opened up to the final bolt size yet. I was thinking of taking the
center section and attaching it to the wings out of the airplane and
reaming the holes, or I could ream the holes in the center section to
the final size and install the center section on the plane now, then
put the wings on the plane and re-ream the holes to fit. That seems to
be a more precise way of doing it because it would make sure the
dihedral is set perfectly on both wings. Or I could just put in the
center section now and ream the center section and wing spar together
at the end of construction. My question is, did anyone ream the wings
and center section together, how hard was it to do, is there enough
room in the cockpit to do a decent job, and if you had to do it over
again, how would you do it?

Thanks.

Joe in Oshkosh



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carlossa52(at)gmail.com
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PostPosted: Tue May 24, 2011 4:36 pm    Post subject: Wings and Rivets Reply with quote

Hello, Joe
About a thousand years ago (it does feels that way) I posted details on the Avex rivets (part numbers and such) - check the archives (Zenith list, not the 601 list), if interested.
At the time, the manufacturer - Avdel - was a Textron company, but they are now independent (more or less - see http://www.avdel-global.com/en/company/brand-history.html ).

I believe this is such a fundamental component of the airframe that the best thing to do is to get them for Zenair - if nothing else, for peace of mind.

Good luck

Carlos
CH601-HD, plans

On 24 May 2011 14:40, Joe <backstagelive(at)gmail.com (backstagelive(at)gmail.com)> wrote:
[quote] --> Zenith601-List message posted by: "Joe" <backstagelive(at)gmail.com (backstagelive(at)gmail.com)>

Hey Guys,

I have 2 questions I would like to ask.

1) Rivets.  Do the rivets we use have any kind of aircraft designation to them as far as a mil spec part number or universal part number, or are they propriatary Zenith parts only. I have never seen them in a Wicks or Aircraft Spruce catalog. Does anyone know where these rivets come from and what they are officially called?
[b]


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Ron Lendon



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

PostPosted: Tue May 24, 2011 5:59 pm    Post subject: Re: Wings and Rivets Reply with quote

Joe,

I found them here

http://www.aircraftspruce.com/catalog/hapages/avexblindriv.php

We use the 120 degree ones.


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_________________
Ron Lendon
WW Corvair with Roy's Garage 5th bearing
CH 601 XLB
N601LT - Flying
http://www.mykitlog.com/rlendon
Corvair Engine Prints:
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PostPosted: Tue May 24, 2011 6:34 pm    Post subject: Wings and Rivets Reply with quote

I believe Zenith has qualified product from Canadian and UK plants. A phone call to Zenith would confirm. Personally I would buy rivets from Zenith as they test the batches. do not archive

Regards, John

CH701 - Colorado - Jabiru 3300

Cell: 719-494-4567
Home: 303-648-3261
In a message dated 5/24/2011 6:36:54 P.M. Mountain Daylight Time, carlossa52(at)gmail.com writes:
Quote:
Hello, Joe
About a thousand years ago (it does feels that way) I posted details on the Avex rivets (part numbers and such) - check the archives (Zenith list, not the 601 list), if interested.
At the time, the manufacturer - Avdel - was a Textron company, but they are now independent (more or less - see http://www.avdel-global.com/en/company/brand-history.html ).

I believe this is such a fundamental component of the airframe that the best thing to do is to get them for Zenair - if nothing else, for peace of mind.

Good luck

Carlos
CH601-HD, plans

On 24 May 2011 14:40, Joe <backstagelive(at)gmail.com (backstagelive(at)gmail.com)> wrote:
Quote:
--> Zenith601-List message posted by: "Joe" <backstagelive(at)gmail.com (backstagelive(at)gmail.com)>

Hey Guys,

I have 2 questions I would like to ask.

1) Rivets. Do the rivets we use have any kind of aircraft designation to them as far as a mil spec part number or universal part number, or are they propriatary Zenith parts only. I have never seen them in a Wicks or Aircraft Spruce catalog. Does anyone know where these rivets come from and what they are officially called?


====================================
t href="http://www.matronics.com/Navigator?Zenith601-List">http://www.matronics.com/Navigator?Zenith601-List
====================================
ms.matronics.com/">http://forums.matronics.com
====================================
tp://www.matronics.com/contribution">http://www.matronics.com/contribution
====================================



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its4jes(at)aim.com
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PostPosted: Tue May 24, 2011 6:52 pm    Post subject: Wings and Rivets Reply with quote

Hi guys

I shortened the undersize bit so I could get it into the wing bolt access hole and did the same
with a 3/8 reamer. I then inserted an AN 3/8 bolt to get a good tight fit. Used a right angle
drill motor to do the job.

Regards

JES









--


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PostPosted: Tue May 24, 2011 9:33 pm    Post subject: Wings and Rivets Reply with quote

Paul,

You may know that I rarely post.
In ths case, I decided that I must.
Although I am just an experimental airplane builder/flyer.

The instructions provided with the upgrade kit emphasize
that the spar holes must be reamed. Close tolerance bolts
are used. You should not only drill the holes.
You should ream them also.

See: http://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Reaming
Reaming versus drilling to size
The geometry of a hole drilled in metal by a twist drill may not be
accurate enough (close enough to a true cylinder of a certain precise
diameter) and may not have the required smooth surface finish for certain
engineering applications. Although modern twist drills can perform
excellently in many cases—usually producing sufficiently accurate holes
for most applications—sometimes the stringency of the requirements for
the hole's geometry and finish necessitate two operations: a drilling to
slightly undersize, followed by reaming with a reamer. .... .... ...

Joe E
N633Z (at) BFI
CH601XLb, 680 hours, >60 since the upgrade
Jabiru 3300, Sensenich 64x51 wood prop
On Tue, 24 May 2011, Paul Mulwitz wrote: >

Quote:
Hi Joe,
........snip ....snip
This time I had the carry through removed and carefully fitted all 12 bolts
to the structure. I tried reaming at first but decided drilling with small
steps works better for me. The spar end is so thick that it is difficult to
get a reamer to go straight while a drill bit naturally finds the hole
center. If I drilled using every incremental size drill of a "Letter" set I
found I got very nice holes with little real skill on my part.
Good luck, Paul
XL just mounting wings - for the last time -- I hope.
<pre><b><font size=2 color="#000000" face="courier new,courier">


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craig(at)craigandjean.com
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PostPosted: Tue May 24, 2011 10:01 pm    Post subject: Wings and Rivets Reply with quote

Indeed.

http://www3.sympatico.ca/fhofmann/art_round_hole.html

On the RVs the spar holes are reamed and then *burnished*.

-- Craig

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PostPosted: Wed May 25, 2011 3:38 am    Post subject: Wings and Rivets Reply with quote

Hi Joe,

Thank you for your comment regarding reaming vs. drilling holes.

I can only report my experience with this issue rather than claim any
expertise in the engineering details. I tried to do these holes by
drilling undersized and then reaming and the results were inconsistent
and mostly horrible. I have had good luck with this approach on
relatively thin pieces of metal, but the upgraded wing spar stack is
just plain huge. I wasn't able to keep the reamer going in the desired
direction through both layers of the carry through structure and wing
main spar.

Using normal drills worked better for me. The holes appear nice and
round and the surface of the hole seems very smooth. I did this by step
drilling perhaps 0.020 inch increments from the initial size to the
final size. My over sized bolts (AN6-21A for most holes) slip into the
final holes without any force but do not wiggle at all when inserted.
If I measure the bolt and hole with digital calipers I have less than
.005 inches total clearance. Considering the fact that there are 6
bolts holding the same pieces together and the large bolts are properly
torqued I feel there is little risk of slippage or other problems with
the final structure.

If I am wrong then I will pay the appropriate price. I am confident any
problems that develop over time will show up on annual inspections
rather than catastrophic structure failure.

Paul
Xl - In final stages before inspection for airworthiness cert.

On 5/24/2011 10:30 PM, xl wrote:
Quote:

Paul,

You may know that I rarely post.
In ths case, I decided that I must.
Although I am just an experimental airplane builder/flyer.

The instructions provided with the upgrade kit emphasize
that the spar holes must be reamed. Close tolerance bolts
are used. You should not only drill the holes.
You should ream them also.

See: http://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Reaming
Reaming versus drilling to size
The geometry of a hole drilled in metal by a twist drill may not be
accurate enough (close enough to a true cylinder of a certain precise
diameter) and may not have the required smooth surface finish for
certain engineering applications. Although modern twist drills can
perform excellently in many cases—usually producing sufficiently
accurate holes for most applications—sometimes the stringency of the
requirements for the hole's geometry and finish necessitate two
operations: a drilling to slightly undersize, followed by reaming with
a reamer. .... .... ...

Joe E
N633Z (at) BFI
CH601XLb, 680 hours, >60 since the upgrade
Jabiru 3300, Sensenich 64x51 wood prop
On Tue, 24 May 2011, Paul Mulwitz wrote: >

> Hi Joe,
> ........snip ....snip
> This time I had the carry through removed and carefully fitted all 12
> bolts to the structure. I tried reaming at first but decided
> drilling with small steps works better for me. The spar end is so
> thick that it is difficult to get a reamer to go straight while a
> drill bit naturally finds the hole center. If I drilled using every
> incremental size drill of a "Letter" set I found I got very nice
> holes with little real skill on my part.
> Good luck, Paul
> XL just mounting wings - for the last time -- I hope.
<pre><b><font size=2 color="#000000" face="courier new,courier">

href="http://www.matronics.com/Navigator?Zenith601-List">http://www.matronics.com/Navigator?Zenith601-List</a>
href="http://forums.matronics.com">http://forums.matronics.com</a>
href="http://www.matronics.com/contribution">http://www.matronics.com/contribution</a>

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countzero



Joined: 25 Oct 2007
Posts: 25

PostPosted: Wed May 25, 2011 6:07 am    Post subject: Re: Wings and Rivets Reply with quote

Hi Paul,

Did you know AN6 bolts have a rated uts of only 10,100lbs whereas the specified NAS6205 bolts are good for about 12,100lbs?

Also, AN bolt tolerances are class C - general purpose limits, NAS6205 bolts are class A - precision manufacturing limits. You might find the NAS bolts are too loose in a hole drilled for ANs.

Regards,
Rob


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PostPosted: Wed May 25, 2011 8:19 am    Post subject: Wings and Rivets Reply with quote

Hi Rob,

Is tensile strength an issue in this application?

It seems to me the primary issue is shear strength.

Paul

On 5/25/2011 7:07 AM, countzero wrote:
Quote:
Hi Paul,

Did you know AN6 bolts have a rated uts of only 10.1ksi whereas the specified NAS6205 bolts are good for 12.1ksi?

Also, AN bolt tolerances are class C - general purpose limits, NAS6205 bolts are class A - precision manufacturing limits. You might find the NAS bolts are too loose in a hole drilled for ANs.

Regards,
Rob



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countzero



Joined: 25 Oct 2007
Posts: 25

PostPosted: Wed May 25, 2011 11:34 am    Post subject: Re: Wings and Rivets Reply with quote

Hi Paul, I've edited the numbers in my previous post as they were probably misleading/definitely wrong.

Weren't the AN bolts changed to NAS after the ANs failed in bending during the Zenith testing prior to the upgrades? I'm sure I remembered seeing photos of bent bolts in some report from Zenith.

The ANs have an Fsu of 75ksi so 3/8 ANs should not have an issue with shear strength. I've never heard of any bolts being sheared off, what's the issue there?

Rob


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PostPosted: Wed May 25, 2011 1:18 pm    Post subject: Wings and Rivets Reply with quote

Hi Rob,

I'm not sure there is an issue here.

I don't know about any bolt problems shown in the various accident
wreckage. Of course, I have not really paid attention to that level of
detail, so I might be wrong.

I recall some details in the 40 page document released by the FAA that
talked about permanent deformation in the bolt area when subjected to
load testing, but I don't think this was actually talking about the
bolts themselves. I took it to mean the holes had permanent deformation.

It is really hard to bend a steel bolt in shear load. My guess is any
failure in the bolts would be a broken bolt rather than a bent one.

I remember many examples of broken spar caps in the carry through and
the main wing spar near the wing root. Of course, these aluminum bars
are not nearly as strong as large steel bolts.

I would be happy to be corrected if my memory or lack of mechanical
engineering know-how points to a possible problem with my use of 6 AN6
bolts on each wing root.

Paul
On 5/25/2011 12:34 PM, countzero wrote:
Quote:
Hi Paul, I've edited the numbers in my previous post as they were probably misleading/definitely wrong.

Weren't the AN bolts changed to NAS after the ANs failed in bending during the Zenith testing prior to the upgrades? I'm sure I remembered seeing photos of bent bolts in some report from Zenith.

The ANs have an Fsu of 75ksi so 3/8 ANs should not have an issue with shear strength. I've never heard of any bolts being sheared off, what's the issue there?

Rob



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