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On Thu, 15 Apr 2004 19:00:06 GMT, Ernest Christley
wrote: wrote: Ernest, did you miss this post by Robert Little? See below, it explains how taught the fabric is. Corky Scott Once installed correctly, it has a much stiffer surface than the more flexible and stretchy dacron. I have seen many pictures on the covers of aviation magazines that show the top of the wing with pillows deforming between the ribs as the fabric stretches under the aerodynamic load of flight. Properly installed glass fabric does not stretch and will remain closer to the profile of the ribs than any other covering short of metal. Many of our customers comment that our fabric has gained them real increases in airspeed beyond the fact of being covered with a fresh finish. This also allows your paints to last longer as the flexing really stresses the surface coatings. Plus, you don't have the worry of falling through it if you should mis-step on a low wing. You can walk on it as long as the rib underneath it can handle the weight. Robert Little Guys, either I'm missing something here or I'm just not smart enough to get my mind wrapped around it. How is the FG stretched tight enough to make it stiff? Is the butyrate a hard substance once it dries/cure/whatever-butyrate-does? Is the following statement correct? If there is any looseness at all in the fabric, and it is pulled tight by the dope, then the dope is what will carry the stress, not the fabric. If the butyrate is carrying the stress, then would this system be any stronger that chopped strand composites? Yes. It is true. I do NOT know what I'm doing. But I will before I'm done! Ernest, it isn't the dope that provides the strength, not with Razorback fabric or with any fabric. The fabric itself is what gives the wing it's strength and/or stiffness against the wind. The initial application of the correct dope, in the case of the Razorback fabric, or a calibrated heating iron, in the case of the Polyfiber fabric, is what shrinks it. The application of paints on top of the fabric serve to protect it from UV rays, make it waterproof, and look nice, but do not add strength. You should participate in one of Ron Alexander's fabric covering sessions and see for yourself how it's done. They offer hands on experience and you learn how to properly apply fabric to wings and control surfaces. You will discover that the fabric is incredibly taught, once properly shrunk. The skin of a drum comes to mind. You can shrink the fabric too much and actually crush or bend the framework beneath it, the fabric has that kind of strength. Corky Scott |
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