RandyG wrote:Corr. is a main concern of mine, not from rock salt (we don't use it here in the south) but from the high humidity here in La. I think with a good coat of primer then as nice coat of paint it should be fine. But I will probably put a layer of Corrosion Preventative Compound on there as well. CPC just dusts on the top coat and protects from corr. but it will wear off over time so it will need to be reapplied every couple of years. Do you think .090" 2024T-3 will be strong enough on the connection points for the leaf springs?
as and aircraft mechanic and someone who spends a good deal of time smashing rivets in aircraft, I would follow the procedure used to rivet naval helicopters as told to me by the man who taught me riveting,( he worked on the Kaman Helicopter assembly line making sea sprite helicopters.)
all panels, plates, frames, stringers and rivets were coated in zinc chromate, every hole that was drilled had zinc sprayed into it, the rivets were shot wet, that means they were dipped in zinc chromate and then pushed into the hole, then they were bucked, and the head and tail were painted with zinc chromate again. any scratches were also touched up with zinc as well.
When blockhead... oops... McNamara decided the navy needed to buy Hueys instead, Bell sent people to see how Kaman built navy helicopters, then ignored everything they saw and took Hueys off the end of the assembly line, and sprayed them all over with zinc chromate. After one cruise they "navalized" Hueys looked like swiss cheese...
there isn't much of a harder climate than the ocean, zinc chromate dipping every part should do the trick, if not, find a place to annodize everything, Soviet aircraft use that instead. more expensive to manufacture, but more durable.