Hi guys,
First of all, Happy Thanksgiving. Thank you for all of the feedback, I sincerely appreciate the assistance. The amount of knowledge amassed when we converge on these forums is amazing. Love GSN so far.
Some feedback, keep in mind that this is an ARF, the aluminum angles were installed at the factory. I was pretty pissed when I saw the fractured plywood myself. I'll try to correct that a bit by removing them and adjusting the fit, and it should relieve some of the stress on the front plate. I think I may also add more fasteners, as JediJody has suggested. Perhaps two more to each side with washers, and I'll upgrade the hardware.
I knew that hand drilling and using screws into edge of plywood wasn't a good idea, but it didn't sink-in until I was done and stood back. Then I decided to consult you guys., to confirm or defuse my concern.
I'll tri stock around the top plate back, sides and front. I can add some on to the bottom plate as well, if you believe its necessary. I can add it to the sides and some on the back and front.
Regarding the standoffs, they are 2" and designed by SWB. They are one piece each which measure 1" in diameter at the base to improve load bearing on the wood, and necks down to 5/8" in diameter at the motor and has a 1/4" hole. They are designed for this range of displacement motor. I don't want to instigate a religious battle, but I would like to solicit feedback, both pro and con on their use. I've used standoffs before on smaller displacement gas motors, always positive, so I'm interested in your thoughts. My personal preference would be not to toss them.
Would you guys consider laminating the sides with lite ply past the firewall and tri-stock around the front? I am obviously going to cut a new top plate, I can easily make that longer. Would you guys consider 3/32 lite ply?
Lastly, a lot of guys flew this plane with the DA-100, BME and others in the range w/out much mods. I bring that up because I don't want to go overboard either. I would rather build it so it's right, but avoid overbuilding. A tradeoff based sweet spot.
Thanks again guys.
Regards,
sc