Has anyone else found poor fitting fiberglass parts—ie where to vertical stabilizer meets the tail cone? I have an unacceptable amount of bow that will require some work to smother this out and was looking for best way to accomplish this. Any thoughts?
Steve
I did fiberglass work as a full time job at Robinson Helicopter while going through A&P school.
I replaced the intersection fairing on my -7 project because it was so jacked up. I could have repaired every hole….
The replacement I received looked great until I started trying to fit it. I too found several gaps. A heat gun can heat up the fiberglass and somewhat change the way it sits.
I drilled up a series of holes to match the nut plates using a sheetmetal hole finder. I ended up wrapping the various surfaces with saran wrap. Using a trick I learned back in the day, I applied masking tape to the areas I didn’t want to fiddle with, if the could get resin on them
I applied a fiberglass/flox/resin mix and applied it thick in the areas with gaps. I installed the screws to pinch the resin mix to squeeze everything to its normal installed thickness. If a screw could possibly get resin on it I would coat them with grease before running them down.
After it cures, cleanup is easy with a die grinder. I was only concerned with the gap, not the extra thickness. If you wanted to grind down the extra thickness, a belt sander would make quick work of that.
Oh and the curves of my replacement fairing looked really clumsy. I ended up using a measuring tape, a piece of string, some masking tape, and a fine line sharpie, to redraw the curves. I ended up doing it several times before I liked it. Acetone easily wipes off the sharpie if it ain’t right. Then hit it with the die grinder to cut off the excess.
Feel free to DM me if you need additional guidance.
Edit: i’m in the Atlanta area for anyone who could use some help.