I realize from reading the preceding posts we might be intentionally light on specific details.
msb6 said:
These are the doublers that wrap around a Cargo Door installation 80 x 60 door
But I find it a bit curious... there are really only a few major 3rd parties that do cargo conversion and cargo door STCs... AEI, Precision, IAI come to mind.
While these parties are far from perfect, I find it hard to believe that a big company with a lot of cargo mod experience would have something like this in their production design.
So is it that a "new" cargo door is being
installed and these are part of the skin reinforcement.
OR is this some other mod that touches/affects and existing cargo door? And if so, is that cargo door OEM or STC?
I've seen and personally designed some pretty big reinforcing repairs in my time. But 137 inches is pretty huge. Assuming typical frame spacing for an airliner, thats what? Almost 7 frame bays?
Also, to elaborate on what I think some folks were alluding to above...I quote from a very typical airliner structural repair manual, Section 51-30-01 concerning material substitution (the substitution factor for CLAD 2024-T3 to CLAD 7075-T6 is 1.0), but:
"THESE MATERIALS CANNOT BE USED AS REPLACEMENTS FOR THE INITIAL MATERIAL IN AREAS THAT ARE PRESSURIZED. THEY ALSO CANNOT BE USED IN THE WING INTERSPAR STRUCTURE OR THE WING CENTER SECTION STRUCTURE."
So either this is a cargo door in a non-pressurized section, or the original skin is 7075-T6 (seems unlikely), or the designers aren't unaware of/don't care about/have designed around this standard limitation?
I'm stretching my memory a bit on this one, but I seem to recall a 737 service bulletin that dealt with scribe/tooling marks around the WTB fairing. And depending on the length and severity, this could lead to some pretty big doublers. And I specifically remember them being broken into smaller sections that were spliced together. But I could be wrong, it might not have been in an SB. I know I've seen it though.
Either way, I think pushback on the huge reinforcement could be warranted but you'll need to stack the deck with a lot of the problems we're bringing up to make a case against it.
Edit: I didn't find the repair I was thinking of, but I also remembered the 737 lap splice mod covered in service bulletin 737-53A1177. This installs a repair doubler and tripler in place of some original lap joints over the whole length of the skin panel. So, truly huge. I looked at the drawing and it does give an optional splice of the doubler and tripler using splice plates, but it is not required. So there is some OEM precedence for installing doublers this large.
The difference is, that was a kit drawing intended to be used for a series affected by a SB. And it's Boeing, so I'm assuming kitting and procurement is not as challenging. Your situation is probably different.
Keep em' Flying
//Fight Corrosion!