A good sanding disc on a 4 or 9 inch grinder is fantastic for that. Then glass
the area and your right to go
Phil.
Sent from my iPhone
> On 6 Jun 2018, at 4:03 am, Robert Russell via KRnet
>
> ___
> Search the KRnet Archives at
> https://www.mail-
I picked up AN6-7A bolts and with the correct grip length the wings were pretty
tight even before tightening.
Also I made progress on the Diehl skins and was able to remove the spars and
ribs today.
I will have to remove the rest of the vinylester now and then the skins will be
good to go.
Bob
Thanks Mark,Sid and others for the replies.I feel much more informed and
confident regarding this now.
I guess the only other concern I have is as I mentioned about grip length on
the AN6-5A and threads being inside the Wags. Any need for concern there or
should I just stay with those.
I will lo
I'm guessing the bellyboard is like the control line models I made out of
cardboard. Pull a flat sheet through the air at high speed, and a positive
angle of attack, and it will produce lift (fly). (In this case vortex lift.)
Equal and opposite reaction to the air mass accelerated downward is
a
Many years ago I did a lot of research on, lift, drag & aerodynamics in general
trying to figure out what good cool stuff to do to a airplane design. I've
always been interested in fast, cheap to fly efficient airplanes. I looked into
the lift thing, boy oh boy are there differing opinions on th
Both are correct, one controls the "quality" of the lift e.g. Bernoulli, and
the other is just plain lift from angle of incidence. The both work together
in an infinite amount of variations. Heck one can work without the other. The
"quality"/"stability" will be less than desirable for sure.
c
Just a shout out to everyone, EAA 193 and JAA are hosting Wings N Wheels 2012
on Saturday Sept. 8, 2012 at Jaxex Craig Airport (KCRG) Jacksonville FL, Cars,
Hot Rods, and Motorcycles, War birds, homebuilts and certified planes, Cars,
Kid Zone, live music, and lots of good food, Free to all. Trop
This technique could easily be used for a KR wing but most of us picked the KR
design for a reason. Maybe it was to build it sorta similar to a KR! ; )
In making my statement below more clear: The Wittman Tailwind ribs are regular
old style made up ribs from strips of wood, you know, the t
The Wittman Tailwind has a constant chord wing. The wooden ribs that slip onto
the main spar are made from 1/2" wide strips of wood instead of a typical
1/4" wide strips of wood so there is more gluing surface, rib to plywood. I
personally would not want to glue wood skins to foam ribs unless th
Yeah, and many Tapered wings use a different airfoil in the Root than the
outer portion/panel& Like you mention, every rib is different in chord &
thickness in a true tapered wing ie: Midget Mustang (M1/MM1)
CldLk-Tim
- Original Message -
From: "Fred Johnson"
I agree Steve, and a
set of wood KR wings, constant cord would be easier,
> but tapered cord doable. About 8 ribs in outer panel - all wood. skinned
> with 1/6" 45 degree mohogany plywood. GP4 uses similar construction but uses
> 3/32 45 degree ply on top and bottom of wings. It of course has a
I wonder if anyone has done a foam rib with ply skin attached directly to
the foam? Would that even work?
Fred Johnson
Reno, NV
Phil wrote:
That is a very good point Steve.
One could also build a metal wing just as easy, with metal wing tanks.
That is a very good point Steve.
One could also build a metal wing just as easy, with metal wing tanks.
Phil Matheson
SAAA Ch 37
http://www.philskr2.50megs.com/
- Original Message -
From: "Fred Johnson"
To: "'KRnet'"
Sent: Tuesday, January 25, 2011 3:12
The GP4 that George Pereira flies has a layer of 5.?? OZ cloth covering the
wings, the GP5 that "almost" raced at Reno this year is built the same way,
except it has two layers of cloth over 1/16th inch mahogany 45 degree ply.
It has been clocked at over 435 MPH before the engine blew.
Fred
the GP4 calls
for a glass coat. The lateWhitman recomended the glass layer for ply wings
as a protective measure. Didn't the Falco have tapered ply covered wings?
Pat Russo
- Original Message -
From: "STEVE bennett"
To: "krnet"
Sent: Monday, January 24, 2011 11
I agree Steve, and a lot faster to build too. if you build a constant chord,
sans RV, only one rib jig to build.
Fred Johnson
Reno, NV
Steve wrote:
I bet one could build a set of wood KR wings, constant cord would be easier,
but tapered cord doable. About 8 ribs in outer panel - all wood
I bet one could build a set of wood KR wings, constant cord would be easier,
but tapered cord doable. About 8 ribs in outer panel - all wood. skinned with
1/6" 45 degree mohogany plywood. GP4 uses similar construction but uses 3/32 45
degree ply on top and bottom of wings. It of cours
Leif G Alstadsæter wrote:
> I'm going to build a KR2S. I have look and studies a lot about this little
> bird.
> One thing I don't have a good answer to, is what kind of wing-profile I
> should use.
> I have not the opportunities to try either the old or the new profile.
> Can somebody tell what
I can't tell you the advantages of one over the other. I have the stock
wing, maybe an advantage is that there are wing skins built for it that you
can buy. I understand that the new wing is faster, and has more fuel
capacity. I do believe that everyone who is building a KR these days, and
has t
Hei
I'm going to build a KR2S. I have look and studies a lot about this little bird.
One thing I don't have a good answer to, is what kind of wing-profile I should
use.
I have not the opportunities to try either the old or the new profile.
Can somebody tell what the different to fly the old or
Hello all!
My name's Doug and I'm building a KR2S. I took over the project from Thomas
Brady from Weirton, WV, when he decided to go with metal and build a Sonex.
Our EAA chapter (859) is having our annual Pancake Breakfast Fly-In on July
10th. We are located at 2G2 in Steubenville, OH,
Mike Sylvester wrote:
>>Which is the best way to construct the outer wing ? Per plans or with the
>>extra layer of glass inside the wing. Does this add weight ? If you do it
>>this way does the foam flex down in the middle when sanding the contour?
>>If you did yours this way, would you do it t
>
> After looking at M.L. site and several others, Which is the best way to
> construct the outer wing ? Per plans or with the extra layer of glass inside
> the wing. Does this add weight ? If you do it this way does the foam flex
> down in the middle when sanding the contour? If you did yours this
A major milestone was reached yesterday on the construction of my KR2S. With
the front deck,canopy and aft deck completed it was time to go big. So I
cleaned up the basement enough to turn her sideways between the center supports
for the house and now I can do both wings at one time. The wings
com
> To: corvaircr...@mylist.net; kr...@mylist.net
> Date: Fri, 17 Apr 2009 23:37:48 -0400
> CC:
> Subject: KR> WINGS AND WHEELS - 2009 Resent
>
>
> WELCOME TO EAA CHAPTER 82's
> ANNUAL FLY-IN
> WINGS AND WHEELS
> June 6 & 7 2009
> Barber Airport (2D1)
&
> From: pke...@hotmail.com
> To: corvaircr...@mylist.net; kr...@mylist.net
> Date: Fri, 17 Apr 2009 23:37:48 -0400
> CC:
> Subject: KR> WINGS AND WHEELS - 2009
>
>
> WELCOME TO EAA CHAPTER 82's
> ANNUAL FLY-IN
> WINGS AND WHEELS
> June 6 & 7 200
WELCOME TO EAA CHAPTER 82's
ANNUAL FLY-IN
WINGS AND WHEELS
June 6 & 7 2009
Barber Airport (2D1)
(three miles north of Alliance, OH on Rt 225)
Come and see aircraft flying with some of the best
automotive & alternative engines flying today.
Corvair, Rotax, Volkswagen
Pancake Breakfast June 6-7t
Hey Guys,
Just got back from a day trip to Barber field in Alliance Oh.
Fro me it was the first real flight since the nose gear failure 3 weeks
ago. I have my original Sterba prop on and in the summer heat it is not a
stellar performer. Just to much pitch. Any way I didn't even decide if I
A big THANK YOU to Pete and Ron and all the members of EAA Ch. 82
for their wonderful hospitality and generosity at the fly-in at Barber Field
at Alliance, Oh.
477 miles straight line with detour for fuel going over. Flight time was
3 hours 20 minutes with tailwind. Awesome breakfast, great w
Ron;
I would be interested so let me know how much etc.
Jim
-Original Message-
From: krnet-boun...@mylist.net [mailto:krnet-boun...@mylist.net] On Behalf
Of Ronald R.Eason
Sent: May-11-07 8:23 PM
To: 'KRnet'
Subject: RE: KR> sterling silver kr wings
Please email me
ginal Message-
From: krnet-boun...@mylist.net [mailto:krnet-boun...@mylist.net] On Behalf
Of Jim Sellars
Sent: Tuesday, May 22, 2007 8:33 PM
To: 'KRnet'
Subject: RE: KR> sterling silver kr wings
Ron;
I would be interested so let me know how much etc.
Jim
-Original Message
Hi I am back with the kr wings pin if interested email me
Let me know what it costs etc. I'm interested.
Jim
- Original Message -
From:
To:
Sent: Monday, May 07, 2007 11:25 PM
Subject: KR> sterling silver kr wings
> Hi I am back with the kr wings pin if interested email me
>
>
> __
> - Original Message -
> From:
>> Hi I am back with the KR wings pin if interested email me
Guys, a few years ago, I sent him a bunch of scrap gold jewelry I had and he
melted it down and poured me up a beautiful set of 14k gold KR Wings. I even
got a big nugget back t
I have some gold from prospecting but I think my partner is hoping I'll use
it for a ring ;-)
On 5/8/07, Mark Jones wrote:
>
> > - Original Message -
> > From:
>
> >> Hi I am back with the KR wings pin if interested email me
>
>
>
> Guys,
Please email me info.
Ronald R. Eason Sr.
President / CEO
Ph: 816-468-4091
Fax: 816-468-5465
http://www.jrl-engineering.com
Our Attitude Makes The Difference!
Subject: KR> sterling silver kr wings
Hi I am back with the kr wings pin if interested email
VairHeads,
I got a call from KR/Corvair builder Ron Willett the other night, inviting me
to the Corvair Wings and Wheels fly-in at Alliance, Ohio. It's held on a grass
strip at http://www.airnav.com/airport/2D1 , which looks to have the same
generous dimensions as the grass strip on my father'
KR Listees:
I think I am going to build a 1/4 scale wing and see if I can figure
out a way to "Wind Tunnel" test it and see if leading edge fixed slots
will do anythig to lower the stall with out adverse effects. I have
been drying to find some information on what is importent in the design
I think this ad found on Barnstormers tells it all when someone wants to do
serious modifications. Usually, the airplane will never get done. There
are exceptions and we know who they are. I like Mark Jones idea of just get
it
flying...safely.
Kevin in MO
_200 MPH KR2_ (http
ennie
-Original Message-
From: krnet-boun...@mylist.net [mailto:krnet-boun...@mylist.net]On
Behalf Of D F Lively
Sent: Saturday, March 18, 2006 4:24 AM
To: KRNET
Subject: KR> Wings
KR Listees:
I think I am going to build a 1/4 scale wing and see if I can figure
out a way to "Wind
r are an engineer familiar with this method,
I might shake your memory on this.
JR
SanFrancisco
- Original Message -
From: "Hennie van Rooyen [HQP]"
To: "KRnet"
Sent: Tuesday, March 21, 2006 10:30 PM
Subject: RE: KR> Wings
>
> Hi Don,
>
> One thing to c
Don,
I have found a picture of this method. If you would contact me off net
with your email address I would be
happy to send it to you if you are interested.
JR
SanFrancisco
- Original Message -
From:
To: "KRnet"
Sent: Tuesday, March 21, 2006 11:20 PM
Subject: Re: KR>
Hello KRNet
I would like to buy all the Epoxy/Adhesive required to build the Wings
(Spars, Wings tank, Foam and Covering the foam of the wings by cloth and
epoxy)
You can let me know, roughly the amount of each one, the Base and
Hardness for the follow list:
Aeropoxy, E-Z Poxy, T-88 adhesive
Hi All,
I'm interested in the same info.
Or even the TOTAL amount of epoxy and BiD required for the whole project.
Thanks,
John Bavington.
--
http://au.geocities.com/johnbavington
> Can you let me know, roughly the amount of each one, the Base and
> Hardness for the follow list:
>
> Aeropoxy, E-
At 11:02 AM 9/30/2005 +1000, you wrote:
>Hi All,
>I'm interested in the same info.
>Or even the TOTAL amount of epoxy and BiD required for the whole project.
Since you have to ask the question, you will need more than a person who
doesn't because you will make mistakes that require redoing. For m
Could be just whatever Spruce or Wicks send with the kit ?? Virg
On Fri, 30 Sep 2005 08:00:14 -0700 larry severson
writes:
> At 11:02 AM 9/30/2005 +1000, you wrote:
> >Hi All,
> >I'm interested in the same info.
> >Or even the TOTAL amount of epoxy and BiD required for the whole
> proje
oops pushed the wrong button on my last note
- Original Message -
From: Don Chisholm<mailto:chizmsupholst...@rogers.com>
To: kr...@mylist.net<mailto:kr...@mylist.net>
Sent: Sunday, August 21, 2005 9:36 PM
Subject: KR> kr wings
having the
outer panels out of the way now then fabricating the rest
Mike;
I put my wings in another room when I finished them
their not in my way
Steve; seeing as how you haven't installed your center spars
yet may I make a suggestion, food for thought.
I built my outer wing panels with my center spars mounted
in a rollover jig made from angle iron. It allowed me to turn
my assembly over so I could glass my foam cores top
side up, bottom si
uot;
Sent: Monday, December 13, 2004 5:49 PM
Subject: Re: KR> kr wings
> Yes you have read properly, and no I haven't added the foam and glass to
the
> so called butt end of the centre section as yet. maybe I should do that
and
> that will fix my problem.
> It's just tha
No big deal, but a thought that may be maybe worth expressing.
My concern with pre-fab wing skins (any wing skins) is the quality of
bond with the spars.
We need to remember that the airplane is literally being picked up by
the skin of its wings (well 2/3 of it is). That may not translate to a
g
"Consider the KR wing structure (below the skin) and imagine dividing the
top surface of the wing into 1' x 1' squares and screwing a cup hook into
each square. Turn it over and hang 38 lbs on each of the 80 or so
cup hooks."
Hello Net This is long, if you have a KR to work on, repair , or
> It's 29 and snowing here in SE Michigan. For me it's a good day to
> learn
> something new. About this G loading of a KR wing, I guess I really
> would
> like to learn more, especially since my KR is over 20 years old. It
> doesn't
> have wing skins, just the one's I made. I thought th
> I thought that in flight the air
>traveling over the curved upper surface caused low pressure on the bottom
>surface and that's what caused lift.
I think that you were tired when you posted. The low pressure is on the top
surface.
Larry Severson
Fountain Valley, CA 92708
(714) 968-9852
lar..
"The low pressure is on the top"
Thanks Larry, you and Virg are correct, that was a typo of the mind.
Orma
I tried a different approach to building wing sets that makes
doing outer wing panels fast and almost painless.
my idea was to get them out of the way early in the project.
I found when I built my KR1 that building the outer wing panels
on the aircraft was awkward and the space needed to build
full
Don doing the same here but using 5/8 inch (sold as R12) 24 by 96 inch
sheets at Home Depot. Extruded Polyurethane Foam insulation. Added 5 ribs to
outer panel to facilitate easier installation of panels. Glassed both sides
and hard as a rock. As soon as the fuel assembly arrives and gets installed
seems to me if you followed the plans you would have
foamed and glassed your center section first to the
division line between the center section and the outer
wing panel line on a plane that corresponds to the
wing attach bolts you could have used the butt end of
the foamed and glassed center
Yes you have read properly, and no I haven't added the foam and glass to the
so called butt end of the centre section as yet. maybe I should do that and
that will fix my problem.
It's just that the plans call for the ply rib to be used as the guide and it
also says that the rib should be a little w
Will the person that had the wings for sale for $100 please E-mail
Joachim Saupe at jsa...@yahoo.com and let him know yes or no, please. I
accidentally deleted your E-mail to the net. He is interesred. Thanks
Ray
G
Hi everybody,
I'm getting ready to start my wings. I have the Diehl wing skins and spars.
The next step is to actually cut the ribs and start laying up. I had heard
that there was a video about wing construction - maybe from Dan Diehl? If so,
does someone have a copy that I can borrow? Or w
I had heard that there was a video about wing construction - maybe from
Dan Diehl? If so, does someone have a copy that I can borrow? Or where
would I get my own?
>I am also planning wing tanks and I might incorporate the folding wing
mechanism, so it could get tricky.
>Ray
++
Ron,
I am concerned about no wing washout at all. The whole purpose of wing washout
is to preserve aileron authority/effectiveness at high angles of attack, and
near the beginning of a stall. While the stub portion of the wing is stalling,
the tips are not, and ailerons can still be used to co
Response to Colin Rainey's comments;
I intend to provide the aileron effectiveness using slotted airfoils in the
outer half of the panel, to accomplish the same result without a loss of
lift. Rather, there will be an increase in lift with a corresponding
increase in drag. This will be commensura
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