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Author Topic: Nose ribs  (Read 4532 times)

Offline wapati-bull

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Nose ribs
« on: February 01, 2022, 08:32:54 PM »
My question is do I use 1/4” plywood for all the nose ribs or just the ribs that have a but joint of the nose skin thanks, Dave

Offline Theodore

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Re: Nose ribs
« Reply #1 on: February 02, 2022, 05:21:09 AM »
All, some guys add extra ribs made from rigid foam (closed cell)
""Take care of your wish""

Offline Kamcoman77

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Re: Nose ribs
« Reply #2 on: February 02, 2022, 10:24:45 AM »
.

Offline 914pete

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Re: Nose ribs
« Reply #3 on: February 02, 2022, 03:58:04 PM »
The extra foam ribs were 1.9oz. total weight. I did a test gluing an extra one to a scrap piece of spruce using T-88 on one leg and Titebond 3 on the other. Both worked great but the Titebond was stronger. I still haven't decided what product to protect the spruce with but I tried Spar Urethane on the base of one rib and it didn't affect the foam at all.

Offline wapati-bull

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Re: Nose ribs
« Reply #4 on: February 03, 2022, 04:46:46 AM »
Thanks guys, my full sized pattern says that nose ribs are 1/4” plywood. Then in the text it states to put the nose skin butt joints on the 1/4” ribs,  so I wondered if they were all the same. Great pictures.

Offline Aaron

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Re: Nose ribs
« Reply #5 on: February 03, 2022, 01:17:52 PM »
Likewise to mentioned earlier all of my nose ribs are 1/4" birch aircraft ply. Personally I would not use anything thinner than 1/4" from both aspects of strength and gluing area of the nose skin. That 'D' section is critical to having a rigid wing that won't wash in and out on you while you fly. I wanted to share what I did for the ribs where my nose skins butted together. I glued some scraps of 1/4" square spruce cap strip left over from making wing ribs around the perimeter of the 4 butting nose ribs (2 per wing). Once dried I sanded to profile. Some might criticize but I liked the idea of negligible extra weight and additional gluing surface considering you get only an 1/8" per nose skin on that rib, and thats considering a perfect world where you actually make everything surgically straight ;) (remember this is a legal eagle we're talking about not the apollo 13 :p ). I attached a couple of photos from my build process to help visualize. Hope this helps!

You might notice that my rib is offset an inch. I did that so that I can maximize the use of my sheets of plywood, otherwise the outsidemost leading edge sheet will need to be greater than 48", just a logistical thing, saved about 80$, only an issue for a perfectionist...

Also note that I really wish I would have put those rigid foam false ribs in there, now I have long spans of unsupported 1/32" plywood just asking to crunch a hole thru it. You don't need them to fly but they make good sense for protecting the integrity of your leading edge when the airplane is unattended, or the knuckle dragging pilot puts an elbow thru it trying to fuel ;) (I'm not going to brag but I haven't done that...yet...)

Offline mike ketteman

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Re: Nose ribs
« Reply #6 on: February 03, 2022, 03:03:37 PM »
To save some weight,get a sheet of 3/8 balsawood and put some strips on the ribs that nose skins join on.
slapping the air with eagle since 09/2016

Offline Tom H

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Re: Nose ribs
« Reply #7 on: February 04, 2022, 06:45:56 AM »
Regarding the foam nose ribs:  this idea came about because builders were reporting that their leading edge was distorting as weather changed.  Large dimples or depressions were forming between the plywood nose ribs.  It was felt that adding a foam rib (or two) between the plywood ribs would add support to the plywood with little weight penalty.

This was discussed a bunch years ago on the site, if any of the old conversations can be found.
Tom H
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Offline Chuck in Indiana

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Re: Nose ribs
« Reply #8 on: February 04, 2022, 11:37:40 AM »
Regarding the foam nose ribs:  this idea came about because builders were reporting that their leading edge was distorting as weather changed.  Large dimples or depressions were forming between the plywood nose ribs.  It was felt that adding a foam rib (or two) between the plywood ribs would add support to the plywood with little weight penalty.

This was discussed a bunch years ago on the site, if any of the old conversations can be found.

The foam ribs would be a good idea. I didn't do it, and when it gets really cold, there are a lot of depressions in the leading edge. I'm pretty sure it won't really affect the way it flies, but you can feel them when you rub your hands over them.

Offline DA Miller

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Re: Nose ribs
« Reply #9 on: February 04, 2022, 05:05:25 PM »
From reading the posts on the forum several have reported that the dimples in the leading edge skins do not affect the flight characteristics. They just look ugly. I am not going to put the foam ribs in my LE-XL.  I am going to thoroughly soak the leading edge skins in warm water before installation. Once again from forum posts the thinking is: the skins will have a maximum water content so when the weather gets hot and dry the leading edges dry out and shrink getting tighter, when the humid weather returns the skins go back to the tightness of when they were originally installed. Hence no dimples.  If the skins are installed dry (low water content) then when hot humid weather comes the leading edges get soggy and lose their tightness and develop dimples.  Or so they say.  We shall see :D

Offline Chuck in Indiana

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Re: Nose ribs
« Reply #10 on: February 04, 2022, 05:13:23 PM »
I wet mine.. :)

Offline DA Miller

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Re: Nose ribs
« Reply #11 on: February 04, 2022, 05:49:50 PM »
yeah, when I read that you developed dimples when it got cold I wondered how that fit in with my theory. It will be interesting to see how the dimples act when your plane goes through a seasonal cycle.  Keep us posted :))

Offline pappyadkins

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Re: Nose ribs
« Reply #12 on: July 09, 2022, 05:32:53 AM »
I didn't follow the plans here... I placed my nose ribs every 12". I used 1/4" ribs every 48" (at the splice only) and the rest were 1/8" ribs... It added very little weight & very little nose dimpling.

Offline Chuck in Indiana

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Re: Nose ribs
« Reply #13 on: July 11, 2022, 01:18:50 PM »
FWIW.. I'm not sure how much good false ribs will do. I wet mine at installation and they were perfect until the first Winter. I *did* install a false rib between number 2 and 3 because Keith, I think, said people were cracking the leading edge there (!) at installation. My photo app is acting up, but I have a picture at that location, and there is a dimple right next to the rib. There is a rib bay with no dimpling at all, and two in the next bay. That was the same piece of plywood, by the way.
No matter. IMHO, the air molecules that are sliding by at near supersonic speeds  :) most likely won't notice.
Edit: here's the pix..
first bay with a false rib

one bay with no dimples, but a small one right next to the rib

A false rib would have helped this bay, but not the next to it


Offline DA Miller

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Re: Nose ribs
« Reply #14 on: July 11, 2022, 04:50:23 PM »
chuck, I'm starting to think that this issue of dimples in the LE plywood is in the realm of "black Magic". From previous posts, I was led to believe that the dimples occurred when the weather got hot and humid and the PW got soggy and loose hence the dimples. Now it seems that your dimples occurred after cold and low humidity winter weather.  Do you have any thoughts on what's happening here?   FWIW I'm going to wet my LE PW with no false ribs and take what ever Comes

 

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