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Walked out to the plane, and found a dent
Well, walked out to my 8 on the ramp at Kickapoo today and saw a small dent on the top of my flap. No idea what happened..... is this repairable? I didn't build the plane, so I haven't done sheet metal work, and I hope it's not a "you're gonna have to just use filler." I'm based at Ogden and there's a "aircraft restoration and paint shop" here but haven't talked to them. Open to some pointers.
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I'd ignore it and go fly. Hangar (or ramp) rash, doesn't look like anything sharp hit it (meaning no likely crack initiator).
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walked to plane and found a dent
If this is bare aluminum which is what it looks like, you can use a heat lamp and ice cubes to pop the dent right out. Heat up the aluminum until it is hot to the touch and pass the ice cube over the dent. It should pull it right out.
Your other choice is to use dry ice. No need for the heat lamp. Just pass the dry ice over the skin and that will pull the dent. This is more dangerous than using the ice cube if you've never used dry ice! Gloves are very necessary to avoid freeze burns. I've pulled dents using both methods out of cars after hail storms. Just have to be a lot more careful not to damage the paint. Bare metal is really easy compared to dealing with paint. |
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Call a paint-less dent repair guy. Many body shops and car dealers will have a relationship and contact info for a paint-less dent repair company. They are usually called to repair hail damage on vehicles. And, since many vehicle bodies are made of aluminum, they're used to working with it. They use little pry tools to get into the smallest spaces and work the metal back into shape. A flap would be very easy for them to do.
I had some workshop rash, errant rivet gun/bucking bar dings repaired before paint. I also had some light to moderate hail damage post paint that was repaired flawlessly! It is relatively inexpensive and very quick. I had about 20-25 dings due to hail. It took the guy about 2 1/2 hours and he charged me about $200. I think half the time we were talking about the RV and flying! |
Looks like it was caused by the toe of a shoe. Looks quite minor to me.
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Typical pointed cowboy toe boot dent, honky tonk in the RV did we ???
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Flap position down
Always leave flaps in a down position unless no one can get to your plane. Uneducated kids and some adults have stepped on flaps in up position to get a better look inside. A lot harder to step on with flaps down.
Steve |
Jerry,
I don't think automobiles use the same alloy as aircraft. In a similar repair to the bottom of a wing, the DER spec'd a patch of the same thickness with approximate 1/2" rivet spacing around the perimeter. FWIW |
HF Dent remover
I bought one of these and it has taken out multiple dents on my and buddies cars. 12.99 seems reasonable, eh?:D
http://www.harborfreight.com/crossba...kit-66957.html Jerry |
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