I used 1.8 oz. Dacron sold as glider fabric back in '83. It still looks good
today. No sanding at all just iron it and apply poly brush.
Joe
Message: 1
List-Post: krnet@list.krnet.org
Date: Sun, 7 Mar 2010 13:57:48 -0600
From: MICHAEL SYLVESTER
Subject: KR> fuselage,glass or paint ?
To: KRNET
M
My belief is simple. When one engineers an aircraft you design it to do
exactly the job, anything more and it becomes too heavy to fly and of course
too light it could suffer structual failure.
Ken Nathan
-
From: "Larry&Sallie Flesner"
To: "KRnet"
Sent: Tuesday, March 09, 2010 10:49 AM
S
Hi Netters,
Thanks Mark and Sid for the sound advice on wheel spats.Really makes sense and
I am definitely going to go that way.
Best Regards,
Eric,
South Africa
> What in the world do you think was going to hold the deck cloth to
> the structure anyway (which was infact the original question). I
> used the epoxy instead of another type of wood sealer that was
> going to have to be put on any way. The epoxy was harder for
> sanding purposes to prep fo
Eric,
You could put baffles in front and behind the tire to brace the sides of the
wheel fairing. The baffles will also keep accumulation of dirt, mud, sand
and grass debris to a minimum in the front and rear of the fairing. Best of
all reasons: The baffles will limit air circulation around th
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