Section 39 has you initially drill the canopy holes using a #30 plexiglass drill bit. It then states after canopy removal from the frame to enlarge the holes using a #27 plexiglass drill bit in step 4 of page 39-09. No issues here. Reading section 5-19 on the installation of the canopy it states that using a regular or plexi twist drill bit to enlarge holes in the canopy will practically guarantee a cracked canopy!!!
Any advice or experience here is appreciated. The general section seems to directly conflict with the specific instructions of section 39.
I had exactly the same question and observation. The rear window (RV-14A) is even more interesting because they initially have you drill the window and Roll Bar Assembly #40, then "final drill" #36 and tap them both for a 6-32 screw and insert screws. Stress risers, perhaps? After you get everything fit together, they have you final-final drill the window holes to #27 (clearance for #6 screw). See
page 38-03 of the RV-14 KAI.
But if you look at the instructions on one of the aircraft canopy manufacturer's (LP Aero Plastics Inc) website, they say
drill the acrylic canopy material about 1-1/3x the size of the fastener, to allow for the different thermal coefficient of expansion of the aluminum frame and the acrylic canopy. For a #6 screw, that would be about a #10 drill, or preferably, as Bob Y suggests, a #10 reamer. I would probably go up in steps with at least a couple of intermediate-size reamers. A step drill/Uni-Bit also seems to work well, but the hole size selection is limited.
Great Lakes Aero Products sells drill bits for acrylic in numbered sizes. A 3/16" Uni-Bit with a 1/8" pilot might be pretty good. You could match drill #40 with a bit designed for acrylic, "final-drill" #36 (preferably with a straight-fluted reamer) and tap, ream again to #30, then use the Uni-Bit to get to 0.1875", or use straight-fluted reamers to go bigger.
My personal preference would be to drill larger holes and use
Tinnerman washers to spread the load. The countersink has to be big enough to allow the washer to move a bit, according to LP Aero. Tighten screws until you start to see a little distortion in the window or canopy and then back off slightly.
Buy some 1/8" and 1/4" acrylic sheet from Jeff Bezos and experiment before you start making holes in something expensive.
Carl Froehlich should chime in here....
I'm sure several people will chime in and say just do it like the instructions say... but whose instructions?
And be very, very careful about what kinds of chemicals (including adhesives on tape) that you put on your expensive acrylic.