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  • 1 year later...
Posted

Since I am grounded due to a broken spinner bulkhead I decided to bring the upper cowl home and start the rebuild process.  I have this 2013 thread from @jetdriven saved and will use that as a guide, but the pictures did not migrate as we changed servers.  I have some supplies gathered, including the MGS epoxy and hardeners, carbon fiber in both woven sheet and unidirectional as well.  Gathering supplies to do bagging, and I'll do it right to the best of my ability, but I'm certain it will be better than what I have now.

Here are some pictures before, and during the removal process.

 

IMG_1608.jpeg

IMG_1605.jpeg

IMG_1613.jpeg

Posted

I bought 1TF in 2007, and this repair was done before I purchased it.  As you can see, it was just brushed on thick with only a couple of layers of mesh, and it delaminated, so I suspect it is not the approved MGS epoxy.  I started with a 40-grit disc on a drill, and that worked pretty well, but honestly, it came off easier with just using a knife and one of those painter's multi-tools.  I also burned thru one small areal so I found it best not to use the sanding disc for the big stuff.  The knife would get under the edges, but it was too thin to get leverage, and the painter's tool worked perfectly for this.  I did hit the entire area with 40 grit sandpaper and then washed with soap and a scrub brush.  I'll have to clean with MEK and do some additional preparation, but I have a good start.

As you can see, the previous repair extended all the way to the honeycomb, and I wanted to remove all the old delaminating resin from the picture.  One question for Byron @jetdriven.  Did you completely remove the honeycomb, or did you cover it with carbon fiber?

Jamie

Posted

I would recommend putting some trapezoidal shaped blue foam as a stiffener maybe just after of what’s there for factory …..make it an inch wide then half an inch tall. Then when you vacuum bag your carbon over that, it acts more like a beam. Mine has held up well but it has one crack along the left side of the spinner about 4 inches long but this is after 800 hours of flying or more actually.

  • Like 2
Posted
2 minutes ago, Bartman said:

I bought 1TF in 2007, and this repair was done before I purchased it.  As you can see, it was just brushed on thick with only a couple of layers of mesh, and it delaminated, so I suspect it is not the approved MGS epoxy.  I started with a 40-grit disc on a drill, and that worked pretty well, but honestly, it came off easier with just using a knife and one of those painter's multi-tools.  I also burned thru one small areal so I found it best not to use the sanding disc for the big stuff.  The knife would get under the edges, but it was too thin to get leverage, and the painter's tool worked perfectly for this.  I did hit the entire area with 40 grit sandpaper and then washed with soap and a scrub brush.  I'll have to clean with MEK and do some additional preparation, but I have a good start.

As you can see, the previous repair extended all the way to the honeycomb, and I wanted to remove all the old delaminating resin from the picture.  One question for Byron @jetdriven.  Did you completely remove the honeycomb, or did you cover it with carbon fiber?

Jamie

I ended up removing the honeycomb that was in the section of the spinner hump in about an inch or two on either side of that. We thought that we could stack up 1 inch wide layers of carbon, but looking back I think the better way to do it is to put a piece of foam, blue foam in that area, but make it taller than the factory did,  say a half inch or 3/4 of an inch instead of the factory 1/4 inch. Then vacuum bag over that you have a real beam. 

  • Like 2
Posted

I remember the guys in the composites shop used to "debulk" with vacuum bags. Precut your fiber patches, lay them in place (no resin or prepreg and leave cold) bag and vac and then let it sit overnight.  The fibers would tend to stay-put a lot easier after that. 

Posted

I’ve done ‘slurry’ over foam with a transition, bid/uni/triax ‘tapes’, peel ply, then ‘stipple’ out the excess when doing repairs. Worked well with the Velocity I did.  May be option if you want another acceptable approach…

-Don

Posted

Final plan.
 

I will remove the two sections of damaged honeycomb as @jetdriven suggested and go all the way to the edge of previous repair that I just removed. Create a ridge of blue foam for both of those sections as Byron suggested. If I extend the foam about 2 inches beyond where it always cracks on one, and then about 3 inches on the other, it will stagger the lateral ends of the blue foam ridge. That may help relieve stress, but may not really matter since it will have carbon fiber strips extending beyond those transitions.
 

I have a roll of unidirectional carbon fiber tape 2 inches wide. I’ll lay that up in layers all the way from end to end covering what remains of the existing honeycomb ribs laterally, and the new blue foam rib in the center. Finally, I have carbon fiber weave fabric and will lay that in a trapezoidal shape over the center section. Wider forward, and narrowing as it transitions aft. I can cut it down the center and overlap so that it lays flat. 
 

Thanks to all for the help. Will document in pictures as the project progresses. 

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