![]() |
If this is your first visit, be sure to check out the FAQ by clicking the link above. You may have to register before you can post: click the register link above to proceed. To start viewing messages, select the forum that you want to visit from the selection below. |
|
|
Thread Tools | Display Modes |
|
#1
|
|||
|
|||
![]()
On Dec 29, 8:09 am, "Anyolmouse" wrote:
wrote in message ... | On Dec 28, 6:28 pm, "Anyolmouse" wrote: | | For many years that was the only approved method. Then along came TIG | welding. | | American Champion has been using MIG for years now. Quicker | and easier than TIG. But their tubing tends to be heavier, too, which | makes MIG an easy option. | | Dan | I didn't know that it was approved for aircraft. It's approved by manufacturer's drawings. The manufacturer will call for welds as per their own welding specs, and those specs plus the airframe drawings are approved by the FAA. We sometimes find industrial hardware or other "uncertified" parts on airplanes, and they're approved by their presence on the drawings. For example, American Champion uses a cheap industrial clip nut on their cowling installations that has no locking feature and it's really soft so it cross-threads easily. And is forever falling off or sliding out of place. This is fixed using the minor modification provisions of the applicable country's aircraft maintenance laws, replacing those stupid things with real aircraft hardware. Dan |
#2
|
|||
|
|||
![]() wrote in message ... | On Dec 29, 8:09 am, "Anyolmouse" wrote: | wrote in message | | ... | | On Dec 28, 6:28 pm, "Anyolmouse" wrote: | | | | For many years that was the only approved method. Then along came | TIG | | welding. | | | | American Champion has been using MIG for years now. Quicker | | and easier than TIG. But their tubing tends to be heavier, too, which | | makes MIG an easy option. | | | | Dan | | | | I didn't know that it was approved for aircraft. | | It's approved by manufacturer's drawings. The manufacturer | will call for welds as per their own welding specs, and those specs | plus the airframe drawings are approved by the FAA. We sometimes find | industrial hardware or other "uncertified" parts on airplanes, and | they're approved by their presence on the drawings. For example, | American Champion uses a cheap industrial clip nut on their cowling | installations that has no locking feature and it's really soft so it | cross-threads easily. And is forever falling off or sliding out of | place. This is fixed using the minor modification provisions of the | applicable country's aircraft maintenance laws, replacing those stupid | things with real aircraft hardware. | | Dan | | Thanks, -- Anyolmouse ---- Posted via Pronews.com - Premium Corporate Usenet News Provider ---- http://www.pronews.com offers corporate packages that have access to 100,000+ newsgroups |
Thread Tools | |
Display Modes | |
|
|
![]() |
||||
Thread | Thread Starter | Forum | Replies | Last Post |
4130 sheet | log | Home Built | 4 | September 1st 04 01:42 AM |
4130 - bad news... | Richard Lamb | Home Built | 28 | May 17th 04 04:08 PM |
IS the US out of 4130 Steel? | mallakka | Owning | 0 | April 21st 04 10:48 AM |
Why 4130 tube? | Leon McAtee | Home Built | 31 | March 28th 04 03:04 PM |
4130 frame? | Steve Thomas | Home Built | 23 | August 27th 03 05:50 PM |