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07-17-2019, 09:55 AM
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Join Date: Oct 2005
Location: Estes Park, CO
Posts: 3,931
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Structural
Maybe Scott will chime in but I asked that very question because I wanted to try something. Answer was yes. It is a structural element.
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Larry Larson
Estes Park, CO
http://wirejockrv7a.blogspot.com
wirejock at yahoo dot com
Donated 12/03/2019, plus a little extra.
RV-7A #73391, N511RV reserved (2,000+ hours)
HS SB, empennage, tanks, wings, fuse, working finishing kit
Disclaimer
I cannot be, nor will I be, held responsible if you try to do the same things I do and it does not work and/or causes you loss, injury, or even death in the process.
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07-17-2019, 01:14 PM
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Join Date: Nov 2014
Location: Richmond Hill, GA (KLHW)
Posts: 2,183
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If I recall, 6061-T4 / T6 would be too brittle to bend vs 2024-T3. The bend at the bottom adds rigidity to the panel.
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Ray
RV-7A - Slider - N495KL - First flt 27 Jan 17
O-360-A4M w/ AFP FM-150 FI, Dual PMags, Vetterman Trombone Exh, SkyTech starter, BandC Alt (PP failed after 226 hrs)
Catto 3 blade NLE, FlightLines Interior, James cowl, plenum & intake, Anti-Splat -14 seat mod and nose gear support
All lines by TSFlightLines (aka Hoser)
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07-17-2019, 02:27 PM
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Join Date: Mar 2019
Location: KBVS
Posts: 53
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Quote:
Originally Posted by Mike S
Steve, welcome to VAF.
Lots of members are building non Vans aircraft, myself included.
When you get that SeaRey, try on an RV for size------you might like it.
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Mike (and all), thanks for the kind words and welcome. I've flown an RV and loved it, but it's not the kind of flying I was looking for. OTOH, the first time I flew a SeaRey I fell in love.
The panel will be mounted overhead, and I'm actually on the second iteration. The first one was made out of fiberglass layup, and I messed up and put the compass right next to the radio. (oopsss...) Around that time a gent stopped by who had done avionics work in the USN for 23 years and started pointing out small things that could be improved on, soooo....... We're redoing the whole shebang, making it better, stronger, and faster for repairing.
I realize this is a VAF forum, and sure don't want to step on any toes, but perhaps a "And now for something completely different" section could be set up for paying members who are building non-Vans aircraft who would like to tap into the wealth of knowledge here. And it would also give Vans builders a look outside the world of bucking rivets.
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07-17-2019, 06:44 PM
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Join Date: Dec 2009
Location: Montreal
Posts: 1,456
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Quote:
Originally Posted by Raymo
If I recall, 6061-T4 / T6 would be too brittle to bend vs 2024-T3. The bend at the bottom adds rigidity to the panel.
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No problem bending either alloy across the grain provided the min. bend radius is respected.
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Scott Black
Old school simple VFR RV 4, O-320, wood prop, MGL iEfis Lite
VAF dues 2020
Instagram @sblack2154
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07-18-2019, 11:23 AM
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Join Date: Jan 2005
Posts: 4,283
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Quote:
Originally Posted by maniago
Rarely if ever is the instrument panel relied on as a load bearing piece, because you punch so many holes in it - its just an item to mount things in.
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Even with holes in it, it is part of the structure and will pick up loads. Take the panel out and push on the sides of the fuselage where the panel was you took out. The fuselage will flex more than when it was in. The instrument panel ties to the side of fuselage longerons which provides laterally stability. When longerons are in compression they need things to keep them from buckling or crippling... With the panel (which has an angle at the bottom and is stiff) the fuselage will have more stiffness overall. Is it critical? Not really, but without doing analysis you don?t know what it contributes.
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George
Raleigh, NC Area
RV-4, RV-7, ATP, CFII, MEI, 737/757/767
2020 Dues Paid
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08-10-2019, 06:32 PM
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Join Date: Mar 2019
Location: KBVS
Posts: 53
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Quote:
Originally Posted by gmcjetpilot
Even with holes in it, it is part of the structure and will pick up loads. Take the panel out and push on the sides of the fuselage where the panel was you took out. The fuselage will flex more than when it was in. The instrument panel ties to the side of fuselage longerons which provides laterally stability. When longerons are in compression they need things to keep them from buckling or crippling... With the panel (which has an angle at the bottom and is stiff) the fuselage will have more stiffness overall. Is it critical? Not really, but without doing analysis you don?t know what it contributes.
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In the case of the SeaRey, it's attached to and hangs from the nosedeck. The way we do it, however, is being changed in the MkII panel we're now building.
Sometime, you have to take a step back to move forward, and keep from having to take twenty steps back at a later date.

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