2bits wrote:I am going to use the same PL Premium sealant that I used for the windows, vent, and edge trim. It's good for car windshields and that's good enough for me!
Skinning the hatch is great because it starts to look like a real piece of the teardrop then!
Walt M wrote:David, are you putting anything on the roof ? I used that hinge for my doors as well as my hatch, I did predrill and countersunk the hinge and I used oval head S.S. screws. you can check out my album, if it helps. Walt
kennyrayandersen wrote:anybody know about the long-term UV durability with these plastic hinges? Just wondering.
Monroe Living Hinges are plastic continuous hinges (plastic piano hinge).Our Living Hinge line of continuous (piano) hinges are a safe, non-corroding, economical alternative to our steel and aluminum piano hinge products. Monroe Living Hinge (plastic piano hinge) are one-piece, molded, pinless hinges. These Living Hinges are manufactured for silent, maintennance free operation. Living Hinges never need lubrication. Monroe Living Hinges (plastic piano hinges) do not wear, fatigue, or deteriorate in the harshest conditions, including moist and corrosive applications. UV resistance is built in to our Living Hinge products providing protection from brutal effects of the sun. Our living hinges are manufactured from flexible alloyed polymers in standard colors: White & Black
darhymes wrote:I don't know a thing about the hinge you are talking about, but that is a beautiful Staggerwing! Is it yours? I used to own a Pitts Special and have always had a soft spot in my heart for pretty airplanes (working on a Cessna 170 now).
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madjack wrote:...we used 1/2X1/16th flatstock AL w/screw(8X1"SSPan) every 2"s to eliminate any "pucker" factor...painted the trim and screw heads, black to match hinge color...we used auto windshield sealant/adhesive on the first one, which was overkill...we predrilled everything...cleaned up all the swerf and laid a heavy bead of a siliconized acrylic adhesive(WhiteLightning3600) on the current one and it seems to be working well...
madjack
Steve_Cox wrote:Top oak pieces were rabbeted the thickness of the hinge leaf. Since almost nothing will adhere to the hinge for long I used a 50 year window sealant from Home Depot on the hinge itself. It acts more like a gasket than sealant, and I epoxied the wood strips to the plywood trailer top to keep the water from getting under the wood and to where the hinge is. Maintenance is also the key to success. Keep a close eye on the hinge as expansion/contraction of wood or aluminum will work at any sealant you use.
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