What is the tank of a Pietenpol made of? I think the fiberglass tank of
most KRs is part of the problem, because they crack or even shatter in an
impact. An aluminum tank is better, because they usually dent rather than
shatter.
But probably a polyethylene tank would be best of all. These are fle
I don't necessarily know what I'm talking about in the aviation area, but I
do home-shop machining as a hobby and have faced things like this before.
When I have a hole that has buggered or pulled-out threads, I drill it out
to a larger size, tap it and install a bolt or a piece of threaded rod
usi
But all my essential high precision measuring tools,
and I mean all of them, are calibrated in decimal inches.
If you use digital measuring tools, you don't have to choose. My calipers
change from imperial to metric at the touch of a button, so not only can I
measure in either system, but I can m
If you mean rural areas don't need to worry much about social distancing
because people are already far apart you're right. But if you mean COVID-19
won't reach Arizona you're totally wrong. According to the COVID-19 maps in
the New York Times (based on CDC data), Arizona has 3800 cases and 131
dea
An idea occurred to me about that: suppose you use vinylester to lay up one
or two layers of heavy-duty aluminum foil on the inside of the tank? I've
read that vinylester is the most ethanol resistant, and if the layers are
aluminum the gas could only attack the seams. (And the seams could be
fol
Is an o200 crank a drop-in replacement for these older Continentals? I
knew the original crank is unobtainium.
On Sat, Jan 18, 2020, 4:22 PM Dave Ferguson via KRnet
wrote:
> I'll bite! I am refurbishing the Kr2 Dumbo. Took off the worn out vw
> engine. Replacing the retract gear with fixed gear
I toyed with that before low-priced solutions like the uAvonics one came
along. You don't actually have to do without an electrical system. You
just can't have an ENGINE-DRIVEN electrical system.
But if you're getting your juice from a wind-generator, that's perfectly
allowed. These do create dr
hat
> makes the mixture more runny/less viscous for a few minutes but makes it
> set up faster kinda like turning slow cute into fast cure.
> > I’m not sure what putting just resin or just the hardener in a microwave
> does to it if anything but I know warming it in a pan of warm/hot wa
I was gluing something with some T-88 I bought several years ago, and part
B (the hardener) had become so thick that it wouldn't come out of the
bottle. Finally I heated it in my microwave until it was liquid, then
mixed them as usual.
Is this acceptable practice and does it weaken the final bond
There was an article in Kitplanes magazine several months ago about a guy
who built an elaborate blower system to give his new (certified) engine the
same ventilation it would get in flight. That way he could do the complete
break in with the engine in a fixed location.
Mike Taglieri
On Sun, Jun
The "critic" is spouting nonsense. Some aerobatic planes have symmetrical
wings with no difference between the top and bottom. Do they need to have
their wings angled at 45 degrees?
Mike Taglieri
On Sun, Apr 21, 2019 at 10:59 AM Chris Kinnaman via KRnet <
krnet@list.krnet.org> wrote:
> The fir
I read it several years ago and liked it, but most modern cfi's would
already have Incorporated a lot of the things he discovered. I know back
when the book was written many people thought that the runner steers the
plane and the elevator makes the plane go up and down both of which were
completely
There's another Rotax problem that's not mentioned much. I know a guy in
upstate New York with a Rotax engine in his Kitfox. He gave me a ride
once, and before he could start it he had to pull the prop through about a
dozen times which was quite laborious. He said it had a dry sump engine
with a
The FAA has vetoed portable ADS-B out systems. They want to know which
planes have it.
On Wed, Mar 6, 2019, 10:56 PM Mike Stirewalt via KRnet
wrote:
> I found my solution. It's not on the market in the U.S. yet - rumor has
> it the FAA will have approved it by Sun & Fun . . . but surely by the
So what good is it to me if I have the OUT but no IN.
The good it is to you is that it gets you legal in 2020 for the least
amount of money and time. There are lots of ways to get ADS-B IN, but very
few cheap ways to get OUT.
Mike Taglieri
___
Search t
The only things I occasionally like in Sport Aviation is the Experimenter
section in the back. I used to subscribe to Experimenter, their
publication for homebuilders, until they discontinued it.
Sport Aviation seems to be mostly about restoring esoteric warbirds and
giving plane rides to little
Oh, sure, a steel spring would work fine, but I think there OP was looking
for something lighter than steel to shift the CG.
Mike Taglieri
On Mon, Feb 11, 2019, 8:54 AM Flesner via KRnet
> No need to turn this in to brain surgery. I used a spring I found in a
> blacksmith shop that came from a
Forgetting about the $$ problem, how about titanium? Does that have
steel-like springiness?
Mike Taglieri
On Sun, Feb 10, 2019, 2:42 PM Mark Langford via KRnet Brad wrote:
>
> > Since tailwheel springs are in discussion at the moment, has anyone
> made a tailwheel spring out if aluminium bar a
les.
> > >
> > > Does it really make aviation safer to require me to use older and more
> > > expensive parts in my Comanche, and to pay a licensed individual to
> build
> > > my wiring harnesses, simply because it was built by Piper?
> > >
> > &
Has anybody ever tried using vinylester resin to fasten a layer of
heavy-duty aluminum foil to the inside of the tank.? Then as far as the
gasoline is concerned, you'd essentially have an aluminum tank, and if you
had a lot of overlap on the seams, the gas would never get near the
fiberglass at al
The IDEAL tank would be polyethylene, which is what modern cars have. It's
inert to almost everything, and most chemicals you buy today l(including
alcohol, kerosene, and most acids), come in polyethylene bottles. Plus it
tends to bounce back from a blow rather than shatter.
But as far as I know
What is your tank made of?
On Fri, Nov 2, 2018, 14:50 svd via KRnet
> Hi All,
>
> I’m looking for tank sloshing recommendations (product, procedure, tips).
>
> There was mention of a sealant product a few months ago and I thought it
> would be easy to find it in the archives, but no.
>
> Cheers,
quot; tab
>
> 3. Click "Publications"
>
> 4. Click "EAA Sport Aviation"
>
> 5. Click "Archives"
>
> 6. As it states on that page, "Here you will find the complete archive
> of EAA Sport Aviation magazines starting from 1953"
>
>
&g
Where can these articles be found? You used to be able to order old
articles from the EAA, but the last time I looked, they no longer has any
pre-internet articles on its website.
Mike Taglieri
On Wed, Oct 17, 2018, 1:14 PM Chris Kinnaman via KRnet
wrote:
> Beginning in the December 1979 issue
I think AVweb was the site that reported that the FAA was going to extend
the deadline for ADS-B, which turned out to be a hoax. I'll believe
they're scrapping the 51% rule when I read it in Flying Magazine or
Kitplanes.
At any rate, if a factory could build experimental planes and do an end run
I don't think there is one. The well-established user test for ethanol
before fueling a plane is to fill a test tube part way with water and make
a mark. Then fill it the rest of the way with gasoline (which will float
on top) and shake it. If the line has moved up, there's ethanol in the
gasoli
, Sep 9, 2018 at 8:34 AM, Flesner via KRnet
wrote:
> On 9/8/2018 10:02 PM, Mike T via KRnet wrote:
>
>> Yes, but if you had to run gasoline with 10 gallons of water in it through
>> the funnel, where
Yes, but if you had to run gasoline with 10 gallons of water in it through
the funnel, where does the water go?
On Sat, Sep 8, 2018 at 10:55 PM, Flesner via KRnet
wrote:
> On 9/8/2018 9:06 PM, Mike T via KRnet wrote:
>
>> I think it could in theory, but I have to assume these
I think it could in theory, but I have to assume these funnels are designed
to remove small amounts of water and contaminants from fuel and they'd clog
or fail to work right if there's a huge amount of water. Ethanol and water
are miscible -- they can blend in any proportion -- but if you don't us
If that's really the case, then de-ethanolized gasoline (or whatever you
want to call it) from a major brand might be a more reliable fuel than some
off-brands of non-ethanol gasoline. You are, of course, losing 1/10 of the
fuel you buy, but commercial gasoline is so much cheaper than aviation gas
Would you consider trying one more test? I've been wanting to do a test of
E-10 -- the standard gasoline today that has 10% ethanol -- to see if
"washing" it removes all harmful substances. It's well known that if you
thoroughly thorough mix E-10 and water, you wind up with all the ethanol in
the
What I bought is a stock engine with, I believe, everything stock inside
and what the seller called a "German .010 .010 crank I was going to
use to rebuild
the engine" along with it. (Plus other new parts, some from GPASC). The new
crank came in a heavy plastic bag with no evidence of its origin, s
This is extremely distressing if it ultimately collapses. I just took
delivery of a stock VW engine that seems to be all there and has a few
accessories (including some by Great Plains). But I want to add 1835 jugs
and a Force One prop hub, and as far as I know at least the latter is made
by GPAC
I wish FBOs at airports would just sell ethanol-free auto gas. Then people
could use it with confidence or blend it with 100 LL to get whatever lead
level they wanted.
Mike Taglieri
On Sat, Aug 11, 2018, 12:07 PM Jeff Scott via KRnet
wrote:
> A few months would be about the right timing. I st
I recently had to replace a line in my VW Golf, and I used the regular
rubber stuff available at the NAPA store. All fuel line sold today for cars
must be ethanol proof, since almost all fuel has it.
I've always assumed aluminum, etc., fuel line used on airplanes is there to
save weight. It certai
I think it's well established that vinylester epoxies are the most fuel
resistant. How well that will stick over other epoxy is not something I
know.
Mike Taglieri
On Fri, Jul 20, 2018, 10:33 AM jeb via KRnet wrote:
> My fiberglass tank developed a leak while doing a weight & balance.
> I'm le
SEMI-synthetic is fine. If you'd been using full synthetic I think it
would be another story. Probably Steve recommended semi for that reason.
Mike Taglieri
On Mar 2, 2018 12:56 PM, "Mike Stirewalt via KRnet"
wrote:
>
> Owen said,
>
> > "However, these synthetic oils are incompatible with 100l
You can't use a metal or composite prop on a VWs for fear of cracking the
crankshaft. Doesn't Corvair have a weakness in this area as well?
Mike Taglieri
On Feb 27, 2018 8:01 AM, "Flesner via KRnet" wrote:
> I there an aluminum or composite prop that could be used in place of a
> wood prop? I a
Is this so expensive because it's Teflon coated, and if so why do you need
that?
On Sun, Feb 18, 2018 at 4:50 PM, Daniel Heath via KRnet <
krnet@list.krnet.org> wrote:
> Expensive is not the word for it, but if you need it, check it out. I got
> it from supp...@homebuilthelp.com
>
>
>
> https://
The statistics on the safety record of homebuilts are somewhat misleading.
According to studies by Ron Wanttaja in Kitplanes Magazine, the safety
record is much worse during the first few hours of flight. After that it
decreases and eventually the safety record is similar to that of certified
plane
What was Ken Rand's "best there is" method for measuring the fuel level?
(He died in his KR because he ran out of gas, so I might need some
convincing whether this is that good).
Mike Taglieri
On Sep 20, 2017 3:30 AM, "Hendrik van Rooyen via KRnet" <
krnet@list.krnet.org> wrote:
Hi again all,
This is something that's mentioned in the Flying Magazine article. The
pilot who killed himself in that spin was doing it in a plane he didn't
build himself and apparently he had little idea of where he was in the cg
envelope. The only time I've ever been in a spin, it was with a CFI in a
Cessna
What bothers me about the LSA rules is the weight limitation. There's no
significant difference in flying qualities between a Cessna 140, 150, etc.,
and many of the new LSA planes, but the price difference is about $100,000.
Instead of banning these slightly overweight planes, they could have
allow
Here's his quote: "Kind of ridiculous that I've been flying without a
medical for the past 15 years with no problems, but to qualify to NOT need
a medical I have to get one?"
> Maybe I missed something but I didn't see anywhere he stated he's been
> flying without a medical. He said in 60 years
You've been flying LEGALLY without a medical for the past 15 years?
On Fri, Apr 28, 2017 at 12:40 PM, Ronald Wright via KRnet <
krnet@list.krnet.org> wrote:
> So, you apparently have had an FAA medical within the last 10 years?
> Anyone that hasn't, like myself, would have to get an FAA Med first
I have melted lead many times on the stove and I think all my brain cells
remain intact. You're melting it, not boiling it, so the amount getting
into the air is insignificant. Obviously don't ever use the pot again for
food. A tin can sounds like a good idea.
Mike Taglieri
On Jan 28, 2017 10:5
I'm planning on getting a Dynon D6 EFIS, which is currently $1600. This
replaces all the primary instruments and several others as well, and its
altimeter is encoding. I'm waiting on that because the price will only go
down (unless Dynon introduces a new model -- then it will REALLY go down).
So
er have to fly
without an electrical system or have a mode C transponder. Mode S is the
newest toy, but I hope the FAA isn't going to require it in all planes.
Mike Taglieri
On Jun 3, 2014 1:25 AM, "Mike T via KRnet" wrote:
> I'll need a Mode C transponder in my plane, and o
I'll need a Mode C transponder in my plane, and one I wanted is for sale
used at a decent price from Aircraft Spruce. If I wind up getting it, I
could hook it up to a battery and see that the lights go on, etc., but how
would you actually test a transponder (or any used instrument, really),
withou
Is the Zenith carb that Great Plains sells NOT suitable for VWs?
Mike Taglieri
On Tue, May 20, 2014 at 12:46 PM, via KRnet wrote:
> Thought I would change the subject to be the subject.
>
> I have no use for any of the "leaky" carbeuretors. The best carbeuretor
> that I have ever found for th
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