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Hi all,
I'm looking for some advice from the collective wisdom of the group.
I'm building a 235 with a forward hinge canopy - hinge brackets mounted
to the header tank and gas strut brackets mounted on the longerons -
what I was told was the "standard" method for the 320's at the time.
This method required drilling two 3/16" holes through the longeron for
the AN3 sized screws holding the gas strut bracket on. I've done this,
but this means that I've now removed roughly 1/4-1/3 of the longeron's
vertical extent and reduced it's strength by some proportional amount.
I'm concerned that I've introduced a failure mode whereby a hard landing
could in effect snap the nose off the aircraft. I've seen at least one
picture (which I can't find now) where this sort of thing happened -
hard landing split the fuselage from the gas strut bracket, to the
cutout for the NACA vent, to the load transfer pad.
I'm sure others have built their aircraft w/o drilling the longerons
like the plans indicated, but since I can't "undrill" them, have any of
you done any additional strengthening of the longerons? The thought
that I had was to layup some unidirectional graphite from the engine
mount gussets back to about the middle of the cockpit. Maybe 1-2" wide
in the overhang area right under the longeron, overlapped on both the
bottom of the longeron and the inner side of the fuselage.
Thoughts? (...and no, I haven't asked anyone at the factory about this
- yet). Thanks.
Scott
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Scott M Richardson scott_m_richardson@sbcglobal.net
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