A64Pilot Posted Saturday at 10:03 PM Report Posted Saturday at 10:03 PM Be sure to electrically isolate the part from the aluminum, Carbon fiber in contact with aluminum will cause galvanic corrosion, then be sure you put anti-chafe tape between this part and the wing as carbon fiber can really chafe into aluminum badly. I’d recommend fiberglass myself, as there is no requirement for excessive strength fiberglass will be fine and not have the corrosion issues and while it won’t be as strong there won’t be much weight difference. I know Carbon fiber looks cool naked and marketing people have really sold it, but it has downsides on aircraft https://www.corrosionpedia.com/galvanic-corrosion-of-metals-connected-to-carbon-fiber-reinforced-polymers/2/1556 2 Quote
A64Pilot Posted Saturday at 10:17 PM Report Posted Saturday at 10:17 PM On 12/21/2024 at 6:38 PM, PT20J said: I don't know what would be required but Don Maxwell told me he put them on some J-bar airplane (maybe an F, don't remember) and the air loads were so great it was really hard to raise the gear. School in Tx that I got my Commercial in 30 years or so ago had removed the lower fairings, I asked why as the school prohibited the Mooney’s from landing on anything but pavement. I was told it was for maintenance reasons, so I went and asked the Maintenance chief, he said that the factory had told him these AT aircraft as trainers had of course abnormally high gear cycling and the loads imparted on the gear from the doors caused wear. Maybe it was BS who knows, maybe the real reason was they didn’t want to R&R them for tires and brakes but the wear claim seemed logical to me. That’s why now on my Mooney I don’t drop the gear until I’m in the white arc, it just seems reducing the strain is worth it. Anyway when I changed tires I left them off and at the slower speeds I fly didn’t notice any difference, but I put them back on anyway. 1 Quote
MooneyAcolyte Posted Sunday at 08:05 AM Author Report Posted Sunday at 08:05 AM Be sure to electrically isolate the part from the aluminum, Carbon fiber in contact with aluminum will cause galvanic corrosion, then be sure you put anti-chafe tape between this part and the wing as carbon fiber can really chafe into aluminum badly. I’d recommend fiberglass myself, as there is no requirement for excessive strength fiberglass will be fine and not have the corrosion issues and while it won’t be as strong there won’t be much weight difference. I know Carbon fiber looks cool naked and marketing people have really sold it, but it has downsides on aircraft https://www.corrosionpedia.com/galvanic-corrosion-of-metals-connected-to-carbon-fiber-reinforced-polymers/2/1556Thanks, A64pilot. I‘ve been thinking about this and there is an excellent video on the topic by the people who build the DarkArrow: Since the wheel covers are bolted on with steel bolts, all I’ll have to do is making sure no metal-carbon contact exists where the holes are drilled. That can be done by an extra layer of resin.Sent from my iPhone using Tapatalk 1 Quote
A64Pilot Posted Sunday at 09:18 PM Report Posted Sunday at 09:18 PM 13 hours ago, MooneyAcolyte said: Thanks, A64pilot. I‘ve been thinking about this and there is an excellent video on the topic by the people who build the DarkArrow: Since the wheel covers are bolted on with steel bolts, all I’ll have to do is making sure no metal-carbon contact exists where the holes are drilled. That can be done by an extra layer of resin. Sent from my iPhone using Tapatalk Mine when retracted chafe against the wing and have metal to metal contact, that might could be handled by teflon anti chafe tape which probably ought to be there anyway. On boats we would use plastic washer for bolts and often cut shims from a milk jug if the carbon touched aluminum as insulators. Deal is just be sure they are isolated, the corrosion is surpassingly aggressive if not. 1 Quote
MooneyAcolyte Posted Monday at 02:13 PM Author Report Posted Monday at 02:13 PM 16 hours ago, A64Pilot said: Mine when retracted chafe against the wing and have metal to metal contact, that might could be handled by teflon anti chafe tape which probably ought to be there anyway. On boats we would use plastic washer for bolts and often cut shims from a milk jug if the carbon touched aluminum as insulators. Deal is just be sure they are isolated, the corrosion is surpassingly aggressive if not. Thanks for sharing your thoughts. I am now convinced that I underestimated the chafe-problem. So, here is my approach: the contact areas will ALL get an extra resin layer, I will clear-coat the whole part, AND I will add anti-chafe teflon tape. If all goes well, I will be able to install the carbon covers before the summer. I will report here on any galvanic corrosion problems that show up before the end of the year. In general, I am very grateful for the community discussion here, which can only help to improve the product. My next report will be on the quality of the port-side outer shell after resin infusion. 1 Quote
A64Pilot Posted Monday at 06:44 PM Report Posted Monday at 06:44 PM I think the chafe problem can be very effectively mitigated by teflon tape, however it has to be replaced when it comes off, some I’ve had stay on over year even when oil soaked (nose gear door area) and some in clean areas come off in a month. What seems to help is throughly clean the area with acetone, I think it also softens the paint, then apply the tape with pressure getting it very warm with a heat gun. I’ve considered bonding teflon tape to thin VHB tape and bonding the VHB to the airplane but haven't. There is no galvanic corrosion problem with fiberglass 1 Quote
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