Are you saying I need further reduce the 0.06000 to 0.0555 to get a bit od free play in the fit.
However many have talked about going to 0.028 on the 5/8 and 1/2 tube. Les Homan is making his third legal eagle this time he is going with .028. Perhaps John Bolding could chime in he has built more fuselages of this type than anyone. No one is going to want to tell you that it is OK unless he is a hired engineer.The engineer that did the Double Eagle wing is a friend of mine, when he finished I asked him to do a back of the napkin workup on the Legal Eagle fuselage as I thought there might be some weight to be saved there. Long story short he said $5K of engineering MIGHT save 5-6#. Leonard went into rigor. The XL fuselage as drawn weighs 33-34#, Les is reducing it by about a third. I wish him the best of luck. I would put a chute on that one, but that kinda defeats the purpose right. That's why it's called Experimental.As far as the splicing here's what I recommend to guys that forgot to buy 2 long tubes when they ordered their wood. Figure out what lengths you need to put a BUTT splice BETWEEN the gear plates at Sta 3, you are going to weld all around each tube to each plate so you really don't need either an inside or outside splice on the 5/8 longeron. Plus the vertical tube that comes off the longeron between the plates will saddle the longeron and be welded all around it as well. The Cross tube does the same so we are talking a non-issue John B
Leonard and I have talked about inverting the rear fuselage for those (and other) reasons but it always end up being heavier. With 200+ examples flying and no one has (to my knowledge) bent the rear fuselage in a landing yet Leonard is inclined to let well enough alone.The gear seems the weak link (by design) in a hard landing, I've rebuilt quite a few before the pilot got the hang of it. I THINK if we went to a stronger gear we would start bending fuselages which are more difficult to fix.