Larry, I weighed the aircraft with the cable system installed using a bathroom scale. After the remove and replace for the pushrod system, weighed again with the same bathroom scale. Granted that may have some errors due to internal repeatability and accuracy, plus my ability to block up the wheels properly, etc. I also weighed all the stuff removed and all the stuff installed including mounting brackets, bolts, pulleys, cable shackles, cables, turnbuckles, pushrods, rod ends, etc. The difference was still just about 6 pounds less. I had expected some weight gain. My object was not for weight reduction. I am looking for long-term reliability and functionality. I had installed a flaperon system also, but took that out. That got to complicated. I am staying with the pushrods for elevator and ailerons. I have since added another 4.5 pounds for elevator balancing, which includes 2.6 pounds of lead. Sid Wood, KR-2 N6242 Mechanicsville MD sidney.w...@titan.com
-----Original Message----- From: larry flesner [mailto:fles...@midwest.net] >One (of the three) pushtubes for the elevator in my KR-2 is 63 inches long by 1 1/4 diameter by .125 wall. It seems heavy and overdone, but... +++++++++++++++++++++++++++++++++++++++++++++++++++++++++ Sid, How did you measure the 6 pounds saved? Several components stay in the system , pushrods or cable. It seems to me that if you removed all the cable in the system and replaced it with nothing you'd have trouble dropping 6 pounds. I'm not questioning your honesty here, just your scales. :-) Larry Flesner Carterville, Illinois _______________________________________________ see KRnet list details at http://www.krnet.org/instructions.html -------------- next part -------------- A non-text attachment was scrubbed... Name: not available Type: application/ms-tnef Size: 4650 bytes Desc: not available Url : http://mylist.net/private/krnet/attachments/20040109/771cbd7f/attachment.bin