Naw Joe, I was just asking about the streamlined Carlson struts for the wings that Leonard used on his prototype LE XL. I didn't get an answer yesterday so I just ordered them cut at 80 inches long and ordered the streamlined jury struts along with the mounting kit. I just hope they are not too heavy compared to the round tube. I called Frank Johnson yesterday about building my prop. He said it may be May or June before I get it. He is like Scott Casler, covered up with work.
This site makes it very difficult. Must be keeping many from posting. It should be able to handle a simple paste.
Old school video. Round tube drag.[font='Segoe UI', 'Helvetica Neue', 'Liberation Sans', 'Nimbus Sans L', Arial, sans-serif]Jim[/font]
Sam, I notice Carlson struts on xl-58. Would you use tube next time? I agree at eagle speeds drag isn't as much of a factor, so maybe the boss can enlighten us as to why the choice of Carlson?Jim
These lift struts are streamlined using big box store rolls of aluminum flashing material .016... Comment by the "inventer" Scott Ehni below after pics... Yep, that's a turbine on the nose...Comment by Scott Ehni on March 7, 2012 at 7:53am The fairings are fabricated from a flat piece of .016 6061 T6 aluminum. After we punch the holes you use a large round die to form the two short edges to the radius of the strut tube then you use a knife edge die to form the first two returns and last you bend it on the center-line to make the final shape. The last bend is left open slightly so when you put the farings on the tube it has a more aerodynamic shape.Scott