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Checking the condition after many years: Corrosion?

guidoism

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I know that I haven’t treated my airplane very well since moving. My move was last minute, right at the start of the pandemic, and I have to quickly find a place to store it. That place was an unheated storage unit in Indiana. It went through a couple hot summers and cold winters in there. Fortunately I stored it off of the ground so there was no water damage. Later I moved it to a different location and it got a layer of 50-year-old cellulose insulation on top of it. It spent another four years that way with slightly better air quality.

I’m now inventorying everything and checking on the condition. My quick once-over showed that there’s no mechanical damage: No bending, not scratches. But today while attempting to vacuum off the cellulose I decided to finally pull off the rest of the blue plastic wrapping and I noticed that while it was perfect under the plastic, the exposed area was dirty.

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The vacuum didn’t pull it up so I attempted to wash a spot with warm water and dawn dish soap. Still nothing. I tried scraping a bit with my finger nail. Still nothing. I then wanted to see what a maroon scotch bright pad would do. It didn’t take much effort at all but it looks clean under there.

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This last image is what the scotch brighted area looks like.

Is my elevator cooked?

I tried to figure this out from the info in AC 43.13-1B but the black-and-white images weren't much help. I know that taking it to an EAA meeting and getting some tech counselor time out be idea but I'm nervous and I kinda just want to know one way or another.

Opinions?
 
It looks more like something from the materials. I would try some solvents first. Iso Alcohol, Lacquer Thinner. If it doesn't take it off, it's probably corrosion. Scrub with scotch brite.
 
I know that I haven’t treated my airplane very well since moving. My move was last minute, right at the start of the pandemic, and I have to quickly find a place to store it. That place was an unheated storage unit in Indiana. It went through a couple hot summers and cold winters in there. Fortunately I stored it off of the ground so there was no water damage. Later I moved it to a different location and it got a layer of 50-year-old cellulose insulation on top of it. It spent another four years that way with slightly better air quality.

I’m now inventorying everything and checking on the condition. My quick once-over showed that there’s no mechanical damage: No bending, not scratches. But today while attempting to vacuum off the cellulose I decided to finally pull off the rest of the blue plastic wrapping and I noticed that while it was perfect under the plastic, the exposed area was dirty.

View attachment 120807
View attachment 120808
View attachment 120809

The vacuum didn’t pull it up so I attempted to wash a spot with warm water and dawn dish soap. Still nothing. I tried scraping a bit with my finger nail. Still nothing. I then wanted to see what a maroon scotch bright pad would do. It didn’t take much effort at all but it looks clean under there.

View attachment 120810

This last image is what the scotch brighted area looks like.

Is my elevator cooked?

I tried to figure this out from the info in AC 43.13-1B but the black-and-white images weren't much help. I know that taking it to an EAA meeting and getting some tech counselor time out be idea but I'm nervous and I kinda just want to know one way or another.

Opinions?
Are you sure that isn't some kind of paint overspray or something? Seeing what appears to be the same thing on the piano hinge which is protected by anodizing leads me to believe that this isn't corrosion. Also, parts stored in a corrosive environment with the blue vinyl in place typically have lines or fingers of corrosion leaching under the edges of the vinyl locations which your elevators don't seem to have.

Skylor
 
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Agree with Skylor. Some rivet heads are covered and some are perfectly fine. And the first pic has a defined line. Interesting.
Ok, all of that is all a relief and will help me sleep before I have a chance to go back to them and attempt to clean the stuff off. I can't imagine that it's good for the aluminum, maybe something in the cellulose that was making it stick so hard. I'll try a solvent first.
 
Ok, all of that is all a relief and will help me sleep before I have a chance to go back to them and attempt to clean the stuff off. I can't imagine that it's good for the aluminum, maybe something in the cellulose that was making it stick so hard. I'll try a solvent first.
It looks like some sort of overspray wafted onto the parts and the insulation stuck to that. Or it could be some sort of binder in the insulation that stuck to the parts. The fuzzies on the edges are from something adhering the cellulose to the part and it has a different appearance than any corrosion i've seen. Plus the area you scrubbed looks fine so there isn't any loss of material typical with corrosion.

If it were corrosion i would expect for you to see more of it under the blue film. And to see more hazing of the part. This just looks dirty.

What does it feel like?

I'd try water first and then various solvents.
 
It may be the fire retardants in the cellulose insulation affecting the aluminum. Boric acid and borates have been used just to name two.

Kevin
 
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