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In article , Richard Lamb wrote:
wrote: In article , Richard Lamb wrote: Spraying a urethane foam on the inside: This will stiffen the panel and improve the noise level inside the aircraft. It would require a fire rated foam such as "gator skin". Other are available. I'm leaning this way. Thanks to all, tom pettit Lean back the other way some, Tom. You are about to fall off of something here... Filling large cavities with foam may be great for boats, but don't do it to a metal airplane. The lightest mix you'll get will be at least 3 pounds per cubic foot, minimum. Richard Sorry I wasn't clearer on my intention. I'd only spray about an inch on the panels. Not much weight, and still get significant damping. tom Balderdash, tom. I think you are blowing in my ear. First, just how do you expect to "spray on" a 1 inch thick layer of foam INSIDE a wing? I can't do it, and I can do anything (with Duct tape!). Second, a 100 square foot wing is 14,400 square inches. One inch thick is 14,400 CUBIC inches, or 8.3 cubic feet. Top and bottom skins give 28,800 cubic inches or 16.6 cuft. At the mythical 3 lb/ft^3, that's 50 pounds. Sorry dude, that boat don't float... Yeah it will. 8^) I was talking about flat panels on the fuselage. The Zenith CH701 I would like to build has about 60 square feet of fuselage area behind the cabin. At one inch, that amounts to 5 cubic feet. One website I visited that made fire retardant spray urethane foam says 1.75 pounds per cubic foot, so the weight of this addition would be less than nine pounds. By the way, I don't know you well enough to blow in your ear. Regards, tom |
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