booshambo
Electrical
- Feb 18, 2015
- 31
Hello.
I am familiar with the FAA AC-43-13 which has guidance for repair via splice of 4130 tubing. There is mentioned there the
use of an external sleeve in no surprising fashion.
On the other hand there are these guys,
who claim a butt weld (tig) on 4130 3/4 .035 tubing is roughly 1% worse than one piece tubing in fatigue and tension.
Are there places in light aircraft control systems where a 4130 (say) tube is just butt welded to another tubular part? I think I've seen that in
control sticks and I've certainly seen it (meaning just a direct weldment) in attaching lever arms that connect to rod end bearings.
Question then is, does a control system get a pass on the external sleeve thing as long as you trust the weld? My thinking is that the fishmouth sleeve
is for primary structure repair and the control system, while critical is much more lightly loaded.
Thanks,
b
I am familiar with the FAA AC-43-13 which has guidance for repair via splice of 4130 tubing. There is mentioned there the
use of an external sleeve in no surprising fashion.
On the other hand there are these guys,
who claim a butt weld (tig) on 4130 3/4 .035 tubing is roughly 1% worse than one piece tubing in fatigue and tension.
Are there places in light aircraft control systems where a 4130 (say) tube is just butt welded to another tubular part? I think I've seen that in
control sticks and I've certainly seen it (meaning just a direct weldment) in attaching lever arms that connect to rod end bearings.
Question then is, does a control system get a pass on the external sleeve thing as long as you trust the weld? My thinking is that the fishmouth sleeve
is for primary structure repair and the control system, while critical is much more lightly loaded.
Thanks,
b