T.R | Title | User | Personal Name | Date | Lines |
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1064.1 | | HEFTY::TENEROWICZT | | Mon Jul 31 1989 10:56 | 8 |
| One of the simplest ways of making a cowl is to adapt a plastic
container of some type. I've seen the bottoms od plastic bottles
and oil quart bottles used a number of times. Given enough
imagination you'd be surprized what some people will come up with.
Tom
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1064.2 | Huge frontal area! | WRASSE::FRIEDRICHS | Never trust a premi! | Mon Jul 31 1989 11:05 | 47 |
| OK, I'll start... Obviously I didn't start this note just for the fun
of it....
My Bristol M1-C Bullet (WWI monoplane, Balsa USA kit) has a huge
fuse frontal area. If I remember correctly, it is about 7-1/2"
in diameter. (And with a OS40-FSR, most of the prop area is consumed
by frontal area!) From a chord drawn up about 2 inches from the bottom
of the circle, the firewall slopes back towards the tail. From the
side it looks like:
----------------------------|
|
|
<--Tail firewall|
|
/
/
----------------------/
The cowling fits cleanly over the fuse and opens to the bottom to allow
for the engine and muffler.
I made the first few flights without the cowling. I was trying various
props and so I was adjusting the needle valve (which can not be reached
with the cowl in place - time for a remote needle valve!). The plane
flew straight and level after an initial trimming.
I then added the cowling. After takeoff, I had to add in about 8
clicks of down trim!!
We came to the conclusion that air pressure is building up inside the
cowling and being forced out the bottom, thus giving it "lift".
So, now my question...It was suggested that I make the mounting points
so that air can flow out all around the cowling, not just out the
bottom (kinda like the Corsair cowling). Do people think that this
will help the plane?? It flys OK now, and it is closer to scale if
I leave it, but I am not planning any scale meets with this so I will
give up scale for improved performance.
Do other people mount cowls with gaps all the way around? Other ideas?
cheers,
jeff
|
1064.3 | Casting (not mounting) - Looks great, lots of work | TEKTRM::REITH | Jim Reith DTN 235-8459 HANNAH::REITH | Mon Jul 31 1989 11:33 | 11 |
| Back in my high school days when I was heavily into CL stunt I build a ship
that needed a cowl and wrapped the engine in tissue and tape and covered it
with clay and inverted it into (upright engine) a half gallon milk container
and poured in plaster of paris. The plaster then makes a nice mold for layering
the fiberglass into (after applying a release agent) and the cowl can have as
complicated a surface as you'd like. With the carbon fiber available today
you should be able to make a STRONG, light weight cowl.
BTW: I did this ONCE. The cowl was great and the ship flew significantly better
than when we were tweaking the engine and took a few flights with the cowl off.
I didn't feel the grief was worth it but it worked great.
|
1064.4 | ready made cowls | KYOA::GAROZZO | | Mon Jul 31 1989 11:41 | 7 |
|
You might want to check with "Fiberglass Masters" a company that
specializes in ready made cowls. They have about 200 types in stock.
If interested I'll bring phone # from home.
Regards,
Bob G.
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1064.5 | WANT FIBERGLASS MASTER NUMBER | DELREY::WELCH_RA | | Mon Aug 07 1989 17:56 | 6 |
| TO BOB G.
YES, I WOULD LIKE THE NUMBER TO FIBERGLASS MASTERS. THANKS
RANDY W
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1064.6 | Aluminum turning? | SOLKIM::BOBA | Bob Aldea @PCO | Fri Jul 13 1990 16:11 | 16 |
| Eventually, I'm going to want a cowl that hasn't been vaccuum formed or
layed up from fiberglass. Since I enjoy building much more than
buying, it seems wise to include this as part of my general research.
Has anyone out there ever tried turning your own aluminum cowl?
I believe that is how commercial aluminum cowls, cheap pots, and many
other items are made.
I have a small wood lathe, and a vague recollection of seeing bowls
formed by using a tool on each side of the aluminum to persuade it into
the desired shape. I've hammer forged a few things, but never tried
anything more agressive than a small hemisphere.
Before I begin experimenting, I'd love to hear from someone with
experience who could comment on using a male or female form as opposed
to free form turning.
|
1064.7 | spinning aluminum and copper | ABACUS::RYDER | perpetually the bewildered beginner | Sat Jul 14 1990 06:39 | 19 |
| >> Has anyone out there ever tried turning your own aluminum cowl?
>> ... bowls formed by using a tool on each side of the aluminum
I've done this back in the early fifties when I set out to make a ram
jet that way. (Never finished the project.)
The technique is known as spinning. Try a library reference under
metalworking, spinning.
A female form is secured in the lathe with a disc of thin metal
pinched between the form and the tailstock. While spinning at a high
but still safe rate, a smooth tool like a burnishing rod is pressed
against the metal, forcing it over the female form. (No wise cracks.)
When I was investigating the technique, I encountered forms that
permitted spinning shapes like Coke bottles! Magic. Cowls would be a
piece of cake using two forms sequentially.
Alton who should have been a machinist; it was fun; the new DEC isn't
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1064.8 | ARE WE TALKING THE RIGHT SEX HERE...?? | UPWARD::CASEYA | THE DESERT RAT (I-RC-AV8) 551-5572 | Mon Jul 16 1990 11:40 | 11 |
| Alton, don't you mean a "male" form or plug? That's how I've always
seen this done...over a male form. BTW, many aluminum spinners are
still made in this manner. They're normally distinguished by a pretty
thin wall thickness and fine 'working lines' around the spinner's
diameter over its entire length.
__
| | / |\
\|/ |______|__(o/--/ | \
| | 00 <| ~~~ ____ 04 ---- | --------------------
|_|_| (O>o |\)____/___|\_____|_/ Adios amigos, Al
| \__(O_\_ | |___/ o (The Desert Rat)
|
1064.9 | It's the part that sticks in, dontchaknow | LEDS::COHEN | There's *ALWAYS* free Cheese in a Mousetrap! | Mon Jul 16 1990 16:44 | 3 |
| It's "spinning", not "turning", and the blank, or former, is Male.
|
1064.10 | Soptlight ! | GALVIA::ECULLEN | It will never fly, Wright ! | Mon Jul 16 1990 19:37 | 7 |
| I remember, years ago, seeing guys turn spotlight shades - looked
really neat - and quick - beats fibergalss for time to complete.
These guys were spinning them by the seconds !
Eric.
|
1064.11 | spinning is always over a male form | ABACUS::RYDER | perpetually the bewildered beginner | Tue Jul 17 1990 07:40 | 8 |
| >> Alton, don't you mean a "male" form or plug?
Ummgfhu. At this age to mistake the female form for the male form.
What can I say? The technique could not even be started if the form
were female.
Alton, who didn't think he was that old yet.
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1064.12 | Trouble with Sukhoi cowl | MKOTS3::MARRONE | | Tue Feb 07 1995 19:17 | 24 |
| I am building the Carl Goldberg Sukhoi kit. I made a mistake on the
plastic cowling supplied in the kit (its 3 pieces and a bear to
assemble), so I ordered a nice fiberglass cowl from Fiberglass
Specialties.
The design of this cowl makes it very difficlut to slip over the nose
of the fuse. It is round at the very front, tapers slightly as you get
to the midpoint, then it changes shape to a more rectangular cross
section to fit over the rectangular fuse back by the front of the wing.
When I try to slip it over the front of the fuse, the narrower, more
rectangular part has to be stretched almost to the breaking point to be
able to fit over the round fuse front. I've had to sand down portions
of the round edge to allow the cowl to fit, but even at that, it takes
so much deforming of the rectangular part to be able to fit over a
round section, that I've managed to cause several cracks in the nice
smooth surface. I'm afraid that sooner or later, it will crack apart
altogether.
Has anyone had a similar experience with this kit/cowl? Am I doing
something wrong? It sure has me wondering.
Regards,
Joe
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