REFLECTOR: Novice question
Jack Prock
jackprock at comcast.net
Tue Jul 4 14:58:46 CDT 2006
Well, I spent about two hours or so last night pulling each strand in the UNI side. There were MAJOR squiggles
throughout the cloth. Each strand needed 5 to 8 inches pulled out of it.
But you could see the strand straighten as I pulled...kinda cool! The cloth now looks real smooth .
After this effort. I am very happy with the future strength of this cloth. A few minor squiggles remain,
but I will pull a few of those out this afternoon when I do my first wing lay up. It may be overkill to pull every squiggle out,
but it will me my butt up there at 12000 feet in turbulence, and I would like to have the pucker factor as low as possible.
I cut the cloth about a foot longer than it needed to be.The first wrap of the cloth was dirty from movement, so I decided to throw
that out. I'm kinda glad I did. When pulling the individual strands, it destroys a few inches of the cloth.
Jack
----- Original Message -----
From: Nate Jackson
To: Velocity Aircraft Owners and Builders list
Sent: Tuesday, July 04, 2006 9:43 AM
Subject: Re: REFLECTOR: Novice question
Steve,
As everyone "been there" will note, just handling the triax creates suiggles. Perhaps I was just lucky with since the triax I received was in good condition. I filled my wing and then carefully unrolled the triax onto the wing creating no new squiggles. I cut/trimmend it and took maybe 10-20 minutes for me to straighten minor squiggles.
Nate
----- Original Message -----
From: Steve Goldman
To: Velocity Aircraft Owners and Builders list
Sent: Tuesday, July 04, 2006 8:50 AM
Subject: Re: REFLECTOR: Novice question
Al Gietzen wrote:
>
> Putting the uni side down probably results in a little smoother upper
> surface requiring less additional filler. And, of course, then no one
> will ever see if there are squigglesJ.
Ahh yes the real reason the factory does uni side down. :-) So again being
the novice here If you pulled the squiggles out on the cutting table uni
side up and then very carefully flipped the cloth as you put it on the
cores it seems like it might be fine. Of course having done no more than
look at the triax on the tube at this point I don't know if the fibers are
nearly stable enough to do this.
--
Steve
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