To those that have QB fuselages and wings you will be installing a lot of Cherry Max rivets for the LCP remediation. They are a legal direct replacement for driven rivets. However, they do require special attention and technique. As such, if you are at all like me, you will make a mistake and need to remove a rivet. There's a lot of advice out there. Some of it not clear or contradictory so I went to the source, Cherry Aerospace and found they had a very good video on how to properly remove a Cherry Max rivet. The example is a CS rivet but the only difference is the universal head rivet head needs to be ground down about half it's height before continuing as per the video. I uses an abrasive wheel on a dremel for this. Here's the link to the video:
https://www.cherryaerospace.com/product/video/rivetremoval
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I’ve removed a few bad ones so far, and I learned that this video is ok from an overview but misses a small point.
There is a tiny steel locking “clip/ring” which holds the mandrel from falling out (the steel mandrel gives all the strength to the cherry).
In most cases where you are drilling out a rivet, it’s because it hasn’t set properly - meaning a lot of the time this steel collar hasn’t engaged the mandrel.
It’s easy to know - get a tiny punch, smaller than the mandrel, and tap. If the mandrel moves, then the locking collar isn’t set. This is what is depicted in the video. You can just tap the mandrel all the way out. The little steel locking ring will either fall out, or you can easily pry it out. In the video they seem to use an centre drill to remove it. With the mandrel and locking ring out, you’ve got a soft aluminium rivet, with a pre drilled guide hole you can drill out normally.
In fact, as a quality check I tapped on every cherry I set to make sure the mandrel was locked. If it wasn’t, then the most likely case was the wrong cherry was used. I’ve had few times where Van’s sent me cherries in a bag labelled with the wrong length. You can zoom in and read the fine print on the head.
If you wanted to remove a perfectly set rivet where the mandrel is locked - that’s a whole other headache. Then the head needs to be ground to remove some mandrel and allow the locking collar to come out. I’ve not had any experience with that - I’ve only ever removed the bad ones thankfully.
I’ve also only removed the flush ones - why do you need to grind the head to half the height? or is that only if the mandrel is locked?
YMMV!
A Build Log detailing the build of a Vans RV-14
tasrv14.blogspot.com