At 04:34 PM 9/27/2009, you wrote:
>One end may be 2 or 3 inches tall and the other end may be 4 or 5
>inches tall by whatever length you decide to make your tanks.
=
I would recommend you make tanks th
Dan: I will follow your decision/progress on wet wings with great interest.
Howard Goodwin
Washington, N.C.
N742HG/N21KW
Just Passin Thru..
Dan,
I have considered wing tanks like you are talking about myself. There are many
ways to go about building them as you already know. One way would be to have a
sheet metal shop bend some aluminum to a tapered rectangle ends shape you
desire. One end may be 2 or 3 inches tall and the other en
I was going to build my wet wings with aluminum, so I could build them
outside the wing and then test and install. I may still do this, but am
concerned about getting them the right size and not interfering with the
twist of the wing as they are going in the outboard wing. I am not sure
that this
Netters,
I read an article in Sport Aviation a while back that described the good and
bad of wings tanks, specifically tip tanks, such as on the Celerity homebuilt,
and Cessna 310 production aircraft. Although one has to correctly manage fuel
usage, the article explained how the weight of fuel b
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