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#15
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On Dec 22, 8:06*am, Tuno wrote:
So, the factory seems to be firmly convinced that residual moisture is the shrinkage culprit. Either that, or a very convenient way to blame the customer for the problem. Personally I don't buy it. The humidity inside a wing in some US states and many European countries is probably far higher for a sailplane that has never been loaded with ballast than for one in Arizona that has been loaded, dumped, and stored with the fill caps off. I got water inside the wings of my 28 when I landed out and got dumped on by a torrential thunderstorm. The winds were high enough I secured the airbrakes full open. Water filled the airbrake boxes and then made its way into the wing. I tried very hard to drain in out, I tried to vacuum it out with long tubes, but nothing worked. I could still hear it sloshing around in there. I called the US agent thinking the next step would be to drill holes in the wings, and he said don't worry about it. I had pulled off the aileron push rod seals to vent the wing aft of the spar and left them off for a few days. After cooking in the trailer in the Arizona sun for a week or less there was no more sloshing. All the water had gone. Andy |
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