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Wednesday, March 31st, 2004Deburred the rest of the holes in the left fuel tank skin. Countersunk the holes in the filler flange. The flange comes pre-bent to match the curvature of the tank. I put the flange down on a flat surface to figure out the orientation of the bends. One side looked a little more bent than the other, so I put that toward the front side of the tank. Drilled the drain flange to the skin. Fabricated the vent line clip that attaches to the flange.
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Dimpled the holes around the edge of the fuel tank skin. Adele dimpled the fuel tank stiffeners with the 3T dimple dies, and I made sure she was very safe with the pneumatic squeezer. But her worrisome mother didn’t approve.
I went back and forth trying to decide whether to remove all of the plastic protective covering or just the necessary strips around the rivets. On the empennage, I removed just the strips. It was time consuming. And you end up scratching the skins anyway around the rivets. It’s inevitable when you’re maneuvering around there with a deburring bit, dimple dies, the squeezer, a bucking bar, and rivet gun. It’s impossible to prevent every scratch. The surface gets scuffed up anyway for painting. On the bottom of the fuel tank skin, you have the ribs going one direction and the stiffeners going the other. You’d end up with small little patches of plastic, which wouldn’t do much anyway. With all of that in mind, I bought some scrap carpet to try to protect the skins as much as possible and just removed all of the plastic.
I’m getting very close to having the left fuel tank ready for assembly. However, I think I’m actually going to put together the leading edge first. I’d like to get some more practice riveting before I take on the challenge of ProSeal.