The HStab is finished after 87.3 hours. This is where you start to grasp just how many freakin' rivets are in this plane. The HStab itself is 11, maybe 12' wide and has close to 1000 holes.
The local EAA tech counceler Tom Olson stopped by to do a final inspection on this piece. I had been reading some forums online where they showed some super poor examples of riveting in aircraft that were flying. They hadn't crashed which speaks to the design of this plane, but they wouldn't have withstood the 6g design limits either. So that scared me into thinking I need an experienced eye looking at my work before I moved on. Tom had all good things to say, and even wondered if I had done metal work before. We had a long conversation about his days working in my department 35 years ago.
Here's the front spar, doubler and attachment brackets on.
You use some of the longest rivets in the kit on these parts.
I'm slowly working the kids up to the point where they can make a meaninful contribution. Here's Sawyer doing an excellent job of deburring a rib flange (aka flossing the teeth)
And some not-so-constructive playing toy swords with some stiffeners:
I let Sawyer come "help" me one day after his nap, he spent 45 minutes making a rough draft of the aircraft's paint design.
Here is first assembly/match drilling. There's only clecos in half the holes.
The ribs after disassembly, ready for priming. Just scrubbing these down in preparation for priming took the better part of an hour.
Dimpling the skins. I really like my setup with just having the dimple die a little above table height to allow for the carpet. Only thing I may change is to back it up a bit as its difficult to get some edge holes dimpled when the piece has to mostly hang off the front of the workbench.
Sawyer came in after a nap one afternoon and watched Ice Age.
Then helped me dimple, except he whacked the handle one time when he wasn't supposed to and made the first boo-boo on my skins. Its not bad, and its on the bottom of the HStab so nobody will know.
Assembly starts with attaching ribs and the stiffeners to the rear spar.
Darn fine rivets if I may say so myself. Sure love that pneumatic squeezer.
Dad helped for a few days when I was on vacation.
The finished product. Whew that was a big one!
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