Wednesday, August 31, 2011

Wednesday, August 31, 2011 Mid-Week at the Airport

Well, today was a momentous day. Richard and I planned to meet at the airport at 1PM in the afternoon. The day started gloomy, rainy, chilly but not cold. But by afternoon the sun was out and it eventually got up to the mid-80’s.

I knew we planned to try to get the Kawasaki to run, but I was concerned that the battery might have run down, so I went up a couple of hours early to hook up the charger and have a peaceful lunch. Richard arrived right on time at 1PM and we began the small items leading up to starting the engine. He got the fan belt off which was just an exercise since we didn’t have a replacement anyway, so we couldn’t remove it, just educate ourselves into how to get it on and off. We also worked on the throttle cable hook-up to the throttle lever, and that went together OK. The next step was to crank over the engine and get it started. I had one gallon of gas and 2-cycle oil, which I mixed as instructed. I turned on the ON switch and we both held our breaths and I pushed the starter button. After a couple of cranks, the engine fired up and ran very smoothly. Very exciting! After a half-minute or so, we saw gas pouring out of the carburetor overflow tube, so we shut it down and Richard took apart the carb and found a sticky valve which he fixed, and that solved that problem.

The last thing we did was to install the instrument panel (on that airplane the ”instrument panel” consists of a single piece of aluminum about 3 inches wide where the tachometer is mounted, along with a CHT and/or EGT, if I had them, which I don’t!). I do have a TinyTach, which we mounted, fired up the Kawasaki again, and saw it registering RPM’s like mad.

So the day went well. The next step is to order the 3-blade propeller, get the wing done, and think about flying the old bird.

Saturday, August 27, 2011

Saturday, August 27, 2011 Back to the Airport

Beautiful day today. Not hot or humid, but the gnats were awful, and the grasshoppers were everywhere. I went to the airport about sunup because Sandra needed to go to a Skype baby shower (new to me!), so I had to get back by 11AM. I needed to get an accurate measurement for the wing cables, and also check out the washout struts, since the left one was being attached to the leading-edge tube that I replaced. I wanted to ensure it would fit properly, at the proper angle, and I also wanted to replace the bungees. I found that the struts fit perfectly, and the new bungees tightened them up considerably. So all well and good so far.

I used an unusual procedure to establish the length of the wing cables. I installed the old cables (the ones with the splices), then inflated the wing, then adjusted the left cable to the length that would allow the wing to inflate. I left the right one alone. I found that the left cable had to be lengthened three inches to 110”, and since the right one was 107”, the net length of each cable is 108 ½”. So that’s what I’ll order from Aero Assemblies.

I can’t help but think about how much better I feel physically compared to when I originally started this project. It's been almost two years, so I guess it just takes awhile to recover from a crash and also a couple of heart attacks. I felt that my stamina was much better, and my back isn’t sore. So that’s really good.

Saturday, August 20, 2011

Saturday, August 20, 2011 Next Trip to the Airport

Today was a beautiful day. Warm, not hot, and promise of success. I took the wing out and set it up to inflate. Knowing it would not fully inflate, I began to examine what I had. I checked out the aft flying wire, but did not see anything wrong with it. But the control wires looked like they were straining, which was not normal. I disconnected the fabric from the end of the leading-edge tubes and disconnected the control wires, and that allowed the wing to inflate. So it looks like since the control wires were cut by the EMT’s, and when I spliced them, the length apparently isn’t correct. I will have to get Larry to measure the length of the wires so I can have them re-fabricated by Aero Assemblies.

I had arranged with Richard to meet later at the airport in the afternoon because he was tied up in the morning. When he arrived at about 1PM, we started on the challenge of pulling the fan belt pulley so I can replace the fan belt, which showed wear. He thought he had a tool to facilitate that, but when we tried, we could not remove the pulley. So that project must be put off for later.

We next began to complete the basic wiring so the engine would turn over. We attached wires to the starter switch and the kill switch, mounted and wired up the new starter solenoid, attached the battery cables, pushed the starter button, and after some false starts, the engine turned over. Major success! Now we can proceed on to getting the engine to actually run!

Now I need to start thinking about ordering the propeller.

Wednesday, August 10, 2011

Thursday, August 10, 2011 Midweek Trip to the Airport

I had gone to Aero Assemblies and picked up the new cables and they looks like they did a good job. I wanted to go back to the airport ASAP and reattach the new control bar cables and see if that would solve the problem of the wing not inflating. But alas, it didn’t affect the situation—the tensioner still is within 4 inches or so of full inflation. One thing I discovered, if I don’t put the aft wing wire across the kingpost, the wing does inflate.

On the way home, I thought about the situation and concluded that either there’s something tangled with the wing wire that keeps the leading-edge tubes from extending fully, or possibly the control wires are too short to prevent full extension. I’ll have to check it out next time.