I think Scott's idea of the K blocks in the wing rib idea might be a good one but I'd envision covering that length in the aft end of the aileron bay with 8mm ply instead of aluminum sheet. The reason for this is that I don't have a real good way of bending the edges of thin aluminum along the length of an aileron bay in a reliably straight manner. But, with either al. or ply, it would be necessary for each of those 6 K blocks to be perfectly shaped and perfectly in position with each other for the cove surface to be nicely attached. One way might be to put one on at each end during rib building and fit in the rest when all other ribs are mounted on the spar. Leonard recommends a simple flat application of fabric which is dead simple but flat. What have others done....any ideas or thoughts on this idea ? Thanks..
Scott I am building a xl, unclear on how the hor. stab mounts to airframe?. any photos would help. Thanks Gary. garyverrier@yahoo.com or pilotgary2@gamail.com
Dave, I went with the K block per Scott's plans. I too had difficulty bending the aluminum on my Harbor Freight brake. I eventually was able to borrow my general contractor's 12' brake over the Christmas holidays and bent the aluminum in a couple of hours. When the ailerons are installed, you can't even see the creases formed by the brake. Turned out pretty clean. When building my ribs, I built them complete except the areas that required the K blocks and the aileron hinge blocks. I then sandwiched all of the ribs together and completed all of my rough sanding for shape, trailing edge alignment. The ribs needing the K blocks and hinge blocks went back into the rib fixture to add those features. I found this process required a lot of planning and attention to details but the finished product turned out pretty nice. I was also a little concerned about the weight increase that K blocks add to the rib. I weighed 8 standard, complete ribs and 8 with the K blocks/gussets added. Total aircraft weight added with the K block approach was 62 grams (0.14 lbs). I consider this a wash since I didn't need to add wood reinforcement between the K blocks on the aileron ribs.
Scott in Iowa said..."I didn't answer anything to the washout question... Recalling the great amount of racking involved in getting the diagonal in place, should indicate what can be done. Building this in, is very very hard...I would be the last to suggest to give this a go, as the required stiff fixtures on each are a must...and seldom on hand."Scott, could you please elaborate on your statement above ? I'm wondering what pitfalls concern you and I'm just trying to learn here. If you build the whole wing flat, there's going to be all the diagonals, braces etc. to be built in and finally the nose D ply to lock in everything. Everything has to be squared for sure during the whole process. To build in the 2 degree washout, the rear spar at the outer end will need to be jacked up about 1 inch. All else previously mentioned will need to be adhered to anyway. What stiff fixtures do you refer to ? My intention would be to build in the washout as the wing is assembled. Thanks.