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Bob, Dale, Bob, Tony, Graham  . . . . . ;
Mucho thanks for the input. Its always good to get a bunch of "Been there 
done that" type input to an issue that arises when I'm deciding on how to 
approach something.  Nothing like a bunch of positive reinforcement to keep 
things going.
Back out to the garage!
Steve Hagar
A143
Mesa, AZ
----- Original Message ----- 
From: Bob 
Jacobsen  
Subject: Re: Tailplane to root 
fairing alignment, -and servo pins
Steve,
I have had the delightful task of ripping out my trim tabpins 
twice.  First 
to correct a misalignmet like you have, then to replace them with the 
updated unit.
To remove just grind away the covering layers of bid then heat the plates 
(I 
use a heat gun).  When the glass sofens you can pull off the 
plate with a 
pair of pliers.
The tabs are very easy to align when on the plane.  Get 
everything set up 
and cover the plate with flox.  I used bits of balsa wood jamed 
inbetween 
the fuselage and plate to hold it tight until the flox dries, then remove 
the stab and do the bid thing.
I also niticed a bit of difference between the fuselage and root fairings, 
but always went with the digital level and my plane flys hands off so I 
must 
have done something right.
Bob Jacobsen
A131
 From: "Steve Hagar"  hagargs@earthlink.net  
 Subject: Tailplane to root fairing 
alignment,  -and servo pins
 Date: Sat, 10 Nov 2001 8:40:13 -0800
 I have started jumping around on doing mechanical assembly of the 
fuselage
 components/systems. It seems whenever I get into something one little 
item
 keep me from completion so rather than wait for a part or information I 
go 
 to
 another part.  This week I find myself at the tail end.
 Upon installing the tailplanes it appears that the angle of attack of 
one
 is greater than the other.  This appearance stemming from the 
alignment of
 each tailplane root with the fairing moulding of the fuselage. The port 
 side
 angle of attack looks greater when compared with the moulding on 
the
 fuselage.  This is especially disconcerting since I had spent 
days many
 months (years?) ago lining the left and right sides up when 
constructing 
 the
 tailplane assemblies.
 However upon jigging up my digital level and measuring the aoa
 of each tailplane to the best of my ability, I find that I am 
within  0.1
 degree between left and right. My assumption is that the molding is off 
 slightly
 and I may have a small shape variance between the leading edge profiles 
 near the
 molding giving the appearance of highly differing angles of 
attack.
 Has any one else seen this on their fuselage moulding? It is
 disconcerting but I am not planning on changing anything as the level 
 doesn't
 read to better than 0.1 so I am within the capability  of my 
tools. Any
 thoughts out there on this?
 A second item:
 I find that my left and right servo tabs are not lining up (no
 not in the same direction as the apparent difference of the tailplanes 
 noted
 above!).  Though however this is a good thing as the drive 
pins need to
 come out to implement the installation  of the beefier units 
that I almost
 had to beg Europa to send me.  Do any of you who have 
performed the
 retrofit have any tips or shortcuts for the swap out to to 
enhance
 alignment.  I plan on trying to use the T bar to reset 
these.  Any
 tips on ripping the old units out to preserve the planar alignment of 
the 
 pin
 plate?
 Steve Hagar
 A143
 Mesa, AZ
 (finally some good building weather, I can now leave the garage
 door open)
 --- Steve Hagar
 --- hagargs@earthlink.net 
--- Steve Hagar
--- hagargs@earthlink.net 
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