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#18
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I think your comment is right on for modern airplanes (the last 40 or 50
years) when you go past that, there are often no inserts to receive the screws (wood screws and machine screws). They often go into wood, or directly into steel/aluminum. As a result they get bigger screws over the years until you have a mix of #6 #8 and #10 throughout the plane followd by often more significant action (after #10 is too small) (makes putting it back together fun ![]() Much of this "wear" is from taking apart fairings and panels of vintage/antique planes for annual that don't fly nearly the hours of your local airport rental plane, yet the same requirements apply. Mike scott moore wrote: pittss1c wrote: The other relevant arguement is that we are "wearing them out taking them apart every year" There are only so many times you can remove and replace screws into wood and thin metal before some strip. I have an answer for that, after doing my owner assisted annual for 7+ years now. As an engineer, and as someone who formerly worked on cars, I really appreciate the way my airplane is put together. Virtually every screw that has any important function has a replaceable insert it screws into. After performing a few annuals, I started to get the bad ones replaced. It became clear that it was me who was going to deal with these stripped and broken fasteners year after year. I also started to replace the odd assortment of screws various mechanics had put in over the years with the original screws. In one case, the back seat nut plate had been stripped and pushed aside, then replaced with a bolt. This meant putting it together required pulling several floor inspection plates and contorting my arm to hold the bolt underneath. Thats fixed now, and it saves time and swearing. All and all, my airplane is in far better shape than it ever was, and getting better year by year. |
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