I like old stuff. If it survived long enough to be old chances are the folks who made it had a good idea what they were doing. I figure if the manufacturer specified a metal gasket don't use a fibre one, and so on. My personal exception is I like castellated nuts a lot more than peened or punched hardware though even those have their place.
I've had to tidy up some "improvements" before that made old things either immediately useless or converted them to time bombs and luckily haven't killed anyone yet. Today's project is to put cotter pins where someone else had used too-thin safety wire which had allowed a little movement and eventually valve rocker failure. Luckily no one was hurt but this job right now feels a bit like being a proctologist doing a root canal.
Doing it right > doing it twice.
Respect for the old Methods
-
- Posts: 721
- Joined: Thu Jun 11, 2015 6:46 pm
You do not have the required permissions to view the files attached to this post.
-
- Posts: 642
- Joined: Wed Jan 15, 2020 9:29 pm
- Contact:
Fuck me sideways. I hate seeing that.
My Stinson had those sort of malarkey done jobs. Took about a year through the first annual to replace and redo what I can only guess the previous owner tried doing.
My Stinson had those sort of malarkey done jobs. Took about a year through the first annual to replace and redo what I can only guess the previous owner tried doing.
Twin Beech restoration:
www.barelyaviated.com
www.barelyaviated.com
- Colonel
- Posts: 2590
- Joined: Wed Jan 15, 2020 10:02 pm
- Location: Over The Runway
Guy I know had a C421 with turbine conversion. Lost a cotter pin in the landing gear,
it was trashed during the landing.
Expensive cotter pin. People like to install under-sized ones, because it's easier.
it was trashed during the landing.
Expensive cotter pin. People like to install under-sized ones, because it's easier.
45 / 47 => 95 3/4%
-
- Posts: 2
- Joined: Sat Feb 01, 2020 3:25 am
Old account presently broken, but this week’s job has been to replace a bunch of pop rivets with real ones. They may have been airplane grade (don’t know, don’t care) but they sure were ugly.
-
- Similar Topics
- Replies
- Views
- Last post
-
- 2 Replies
- 863 Views
-
Last post by TwinOtterFan
-
- 0 Replies
- 3123 Views
-
Last post by Colonel
-
- 6 Replies
- 6284 Views
-
Last post by Scudrunner