Blog

  • Backorder has arrived!

    Backorder has arrived!

    My backordered VA-140 arrived a month or so ago and I finally started back up on the build. I took a break from building to get a shed built in our backyard. This was going to free up more space in the garage and it has been a huge help!

    I got the VA-140 cut for the right elevator and I final drilled every hole on the skin to the substructure. Final drilling always takes the longest, especially when I have to put a cleco in every hole per the instructions. But the right elevator is almost caught up to the left elevator when I put it away for a bit. I hope to have these parts done before the end of April. I ordered my wing kit in December when I realized the kit delivery dates were almost a year out. Luckily though they have moved the date up to June or July but I want to get the empennage kit finished before it all arrives so it’s time to get to the grindstone.

    All holes have been match drilled
    It’s always mesmerizing looking down the line of clecos
    The left elevator awaiting the next steps
  • Skin Dimpling Left Elevator

    Skin Dimpling Left Elevator

    I got the skin dimpling done for the left side. I noticed that one of the holes must not have been drilled out when I was match drilling. I’ll have to reassemble that area and then drill that hole. Everything went pretty smoothly though. I didn’t have a good idea as to what to dimple on the very outboard edge of the elevator where the plastic fairing will go in the end. I left it undimpled so that I can deal with it down the road.

    Dimpled Skins
    The end with the missed hole and then my guess as to what holes needed to be left alone for the fairing
  • Left Elevator Deburring

    Left Elevator Deburring

    I got almost all of the deburring done on the left elevator. I noticed that I had forgotten to prep the edge of the lightening circles on the front spar, so I got that done. I redid some of the fold work on the elevator skins too because it wasn’t to my satisfaction. It still isn’t satisfactory as it’s not a clean fold and has a little bit of a ripple. I still have to deburr the outside edge of the top skin and then deburr all of the bottom skin and it’ll be prepped for dimpling, priming and then assembly.

    Prepped structural parts for the left elevator
    Skins almost fully prepped
  • Elevator Trim Access Panel Prep

    Elevator Trim Access Panel Prep

    After I had finished all of the match drilling yesterday, it was time to work on these access panels before it has to be entirely disassembled. I did both the left and right elevator since my missing hardware does not affect me prepping these parts. Getting the nut plate drilled onto the access panel wasn’t too terribly difficult but that steel is harder and dulled two of my bits before it was all said and done. Luckily it only dulled the tip so I can still use that last bit for match drilling. I had a difficult time getting a hole to keep the bit centered. I am going to see if I can find a good notching tool today as my current tool is not really designed for metal.

    I moved to the dimpling of these parts which had some of it’s own challenges. First was that I grabbed the wrong nutplates. I accidentally grabbed a K1000-06 thinking I had grabbed a K1100-06. I saw that this would NOT work and I was curious what the heck I did wrong. I posted it to the Facebook group called Van’s Aircraft builders and they VERY quickly spotted I had the wrong part. I went back to check and sure enough my bins for the K1000-06 and K1100-06 are right on top of each other and I must have seen the number but then pulled on the wrong bin. I am glad I caught it though instead of moving forward in my ignorance. It was good to learn the difference between a K1000 and K1100.

    The next issue that I encountered was that the access panel would not sit flush to the reinforcement plate. The dimples need to be deeper in the receiving reinforcement skin. One of the guys on the Facebook group mentioned using the deburring tool to massage it. I did some but it didn’t help enough. I’m curious how much material should be removed there. I searched to see if there was a different dimple die for the bottom skin but I didn’t find anything yet. I’ll keep looking because that is going to make the access panel sit proud of the skin when all is said and done.

    Everything though is finished at this point and I will start disassembly and deburring this afternoon. This actually spanned last night and into this morning (12/10 to 12/11/2021)

    On another note, I decided to secure the parts that I had already built. During the Christmas decorating the boys kept touching and moving the parts and it was making me VERY nervous. I decided to use some of that A/C mounting ribbon to string it from the rafters in the attic. This will work for these parts but I don’t want to do this for the wings and other parts that will be built. So I’m building a shed in the back yard that will be 10′ x 14′ where all of the yard tools and chemicals will go that are taking up a large portion of my garage storage space now.

    And a final note, I ordered my wing kit yesterday! I saw that the lead times were up to 10 months now for a kit! Crazy what this pandemic has done to lead times! Either way, fingers crossed that arrives in October or sooner but it looks like I’ll have some downtime between the empennage kit and the wing kit.

    Left access panel with the nut drilled into place
    Right access panel with nut drilled into place
    What I thought at the time were the K1100-06
    Yeah that doesn’t look right….
    Oh… I picked from the K1000-06… Vans Aircraft Facebook group quickly pointed that out to me
    These are the right ones!
    The access panel not sitting flush after dimpling. Ended up using the deburring tool to help it some
    All parts dimpled!
    My current storage solution in the attic. Once the backyard shed is built I will have more room in the garage to make these fit there or maybe I’ll just leave them and put the wings in the garage
  • Full Assembly and Match-drilling

    Full Assembly and Match-drilling

    I got all of the pieces done and assembled and match drilled up to Page 9-8 Step 3. Even though these are just like the rudder in a way, they have quite a few more pieces in total since you are building two at the same time. I did run into a bit of a snag. While cutting the E-1023 trailing edge wedge pieces from the trailing edge wedge piece, I was literally one hole short on getting all of the trailing edge ready. So I am putting the right elevator to the side for now until the additional piece will show up. For now it is on back order so no telling how long that will take to get in. I also had some interesting times getting the elevator tip piece mated up to the elevator with all the holes lining up. It took some massaging but it finally came together.

    Right elevator mostly put together and just waiting for the trailing edge wedge replacement
    Left elevator completely match drilled and ready to go on to the next step
    The small amount of trailing edge wedge that I am missing. I would have had it if I hadn’t used some of this for the blind rivet tool piece that I made so I could do the blind riveting in tight spaces.
  • Elevators – Pages 9-3 through 9-6

    Elevators – Pages 9-3 through 9-6

    I got quite quite a bit of clecoing done today as well as a little bit of the match drilling. The coolest part was doing the tab bends on the E-1001A & B skins. Using the mushroom bit in the rivet gun worked like a champ on getting those bends nice and clean. I did learn that it is best that your work surface have a hard edge to it. My work bench has a bit of a rounded edge so I put a piece of wood that still had a sharp 90 degree edge on it at the end of the bench to clamp the skins onto. That made this function a lot better. I did get one of the tabs off slightly due to the skin slipping some and me not noticing it. We will see how much that affects it down the road. I might have to re-bend that but not sure how well this alclad aluminum will take re-bending.

    This is the right elevator. It is slightly further in than they expected
    This is the left elevator. It is even further in than they wanted it to be. I even measured these but while I was bending it it must have slipped some.
    The Left Elevator trim tab reinforcement panel clecoed in place
    Right Elevator trim tab reinforcement plate in place
    The two assemblies together and ready for match drilling tomorrow
  • Deburring, Fluting, and Initial Assembly

    Deburring, Fluting, and Initial Assembly

    I spent quite a bit of time going through and deburring all of the elevator pieces minus the large skin edges. That took the most time out of all of this. I then worked on the 903 and 904 pieces to get them straight and level. Mine came pre-fluted but I ended up having to remove the majority of what they put in as it was causing it to bow pretty bad. I then assembled everything and I’ll do the match drilling tomorrow. My ribs for the elevator were already final sized, but the 903 and 904 ribs were not, so that I will finish tomorrow after we’re done shopping for Black Friday.

    The deburring station after I was done. Aluminum dust everywhere!
    The ribs all clecoed together. They didn’t need match drilling though as the #30 drill went through without removing any material
    The assembled elevator ends. I’ll have to match drill these tomorrow
  • Starting on the Elevators

    Starting on the Elevators

    My son and I found all of the elevator parts in the attic and brought them down to start working on them. I’m not including the searching and inventory time in yesterday’s work. We got all of the protective plastic off of them and I cut the ribs per the instructions. The band saw made quick work of them, but it tends to leave them pretty jagged. I ran all of them through the initial deburring on the wheel and tomorrow I will finish the deburring with the Dremel so that I can get into the tighter areas.

    Brendon helping me remove the protective plastic
    Ready for cutting!
    Tool of choice! Not the best bandsaw in the world if you ask me, but it gets the job done.
    All cut and ready for deburring
  • Horizontal Stabilizer Finished!

    Horizontal Stabilizer Finished!

    Oh man, this was a TON of riveting. My previous sections didn’t have this many rivets, but it was very rewarding! After I got caught up and then some on Friday after work, I really dug in all day Saturday and a little bit on Sunday. This was all riveting the entire time, starting from the front spar, to the stringers, to the skin outwards and then finally to the rear spar. It was really fun and there were a few things I learned along the way.

    The main issue I encountered was when I was going to rivet the LP4-3 blind rivets for the rear spar to the mid ribs. The middle rivet was fine, but the outside ones were too close to the flange for me to get a straight shot with the rivet guns I had. I decided to keep moving and deal with it later. When I opened the drawer to get another tool, I saw the dies for the blind dimpling tool. I realized that if I stacked then together, I could then create enough space to get my riveting gun in there!

    A side view of the issue I was encountering. The rivet gun was cocked to the side against the flange instead of being straight on against the spar webbing
    The solution setup on the gun
    The dies providing me with enough elevation to get above the flange
    The front spar, stringers, and inside mid ribs all riveted before I took a break to take Andrew to his guitar lesson
    All of the mid ribs have been riveted! I took a break to get some sleep and go to church super early the next day
    The finished product! I decided to take a few hours Sunday night to finish it up. I was too excited!

    I was super exhausted after working on this so much on Friday and Saturday. I spent a total of 15 hours and 15 minutes on it this weekend to wrap it up. I’m super excited that I’ve continued to hone my skills with this portion of the build and I’m ready to get on to the elevators! During my breaks tomorrow with work I’m going to go into the attic to gather all of the parts and bring them down to the garage.

  • More HS Skin Riveting

    More HS Skin Riveting

    It has been a long while since I last worked on the plane. I’ve not had much time and I probably need to see how best to use an hour here and there to do this build. I had a good three hours today (11/19/2021) so I got after it. I left this off when I riveted the nose ribs into place and got the front spar riveted. I then noticed that I did not fully rivet two nose ribs and I would have to remove the front spar to get to them again. I drilled out most of those rivets but that is where I left it in June. That was three hours worth of work there.

    Fast forward to tonight and I fixed my mistake with the unriveted nose ribs and got back to where I was plus some. I got a good row of rivets done on the front spar flange to the skin. Tomorrow I will have quite a bit of time and I Hope to complete the front spar flange riveting and hopefully start on riveting the mid-rib flanges.

    I did make a discovery on these two different mushroom rivet heads. The one surrounded with rubber requires quite a bit of force to seat the head to the skin. I’ve found it easier to use the standard mushroom head to get some decent looking rivets that are very flush with the skin.

    Here are the results of tonight’s work.

    Section of riveted front spar flange holes
    The front ribs that I forgot to rivet are now done!