DG505, DG500 Spoiler box does not drain and freezes
On Dec 9, 10:11*pm, 2G wrote:
On Dec 9, 8:58*pm, Darryl Ramm wrote:
On Dec 9, 7:22*pm, Eric Greenwell wrote:
guy wrote:
Oh...Karen. *Why fret.
Just return the plane to the factory and they will add those drain
holes they forgot to place as a free warranty repair.
Great customer service!
Guy
"No drain holes" may be the standard. My ASH 26 E does not have drain
holes in the spoiler boxes, and does not need them as long as the
spoilers are closed when it rains on the ground. If rain gets into the
boxes when flying, I've never heard of it happening; personally, I've
never looked in the boxes after flying through rain, but none ever
poured out when I derigged, either. If they are open when it rains, the
boxes will fill with water. The boxes are sealed, so it doesn't run into
the wing.
--
Eric Greenwell - Washington State, USA
* Change "netto" to "net" to email me directly
The boxes are sealed but the lower floor of the box usually is or
touches the bottom wing skin so if you really wanted to you could
drill a hole right there through the lower skin. Your A&P may have a
different idea.
But why? I suspect the largest issue with spoiler freezing is by rain
wicking around the spoiler door and freezing or by direct icing
action. Having enough water inside the spoiler box and having that
freeze seems a remote case. And you need to have enough for that to
freeze and lock onto something important to stop the blades extending.
I suspect that would take quite a lot of water.
Although my ASH-26E usually lives in a trailer sometimes it is left
out overnight and in the the morning even after light rain I normally
see no water in the spoiler boxes. After washing with a hose I'll see
a bit of water inside the spoiler box. Same on a club DG-1000S. Just
to be nice I usually mop any water out with a dry rag more because I
don't want moisture in there encouraging rust etc. not from concern
about freezing.
If the glider is permanently kept outside then a set of good wing
covers are probably an answer to lots of questions.
Darryl- Hide quoted text -
- Show quoted text -
Boy, I thought you guys were glider pilots! There is no "drain"
because that would be a path for high pressure air from the bottom of
the wing to escape to low pressure air on top, creating drag.
Tom
I don't think the wing interior to spoiler box connection (where the
control rods enter the spoiler box) is all that airtight on most
gliders and will see ambient internal wing/fueslage pressure, some of
which will leak out around the spoiler box top, but modern spring
loaded tops seal pretty well. So I am not sure that a small hole in
the bottom would increase that leak rate significantly. But hey, if
done really well you've got yourself a blown turbolator :-)
There are gliders around with holes drilled in the bottoms of the
spoiler box, for attaching wing tie down hardware. Normally I'd tape
those but you'd never measure the difference if not.
Darryl
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