marsolgp wrote:When I flush riveted my Waiex (all except bottom of fuselage) I drilled holes to #40, dimpled, then reamed all holes to #30…
G - While that method can work, multiple builders (myself included) find it very hard to debur the hole (since you're drilling
after dimpling). It certainly produces the "best" hole this way, assuming you can fully debur both sides of the hole properly.
Like many others, I found it simpler to drill with a #32, then debur, then dimple as the final step. YMMV!
NOTE: I am one of those afore-mentioned glider pilots. ;-) ...And while I'll point out that turbulators on gliders are placed in a very precise location only in specific spots (usually on the underside of the wing back near trailing edge / control surfaces), its not worth a lengthy debate - you're not aiming for the same level of precision on a Sonex and you aren't concerned with maximizing L/D like we do on sailplanes (i.e. wing surface waviness less than 0.004").
A Sonex with all-flush-rivets (such as the one I'm building) will see a slight performance increase; but at most it'll be just a few mph. In my experience (wings and empennage complete), the flush rivets add ~10% - 15% to your total build-time. This is because of both the dimpling process, and some extra fiddly-ness with some parts because they weren't designed with flush riveting in mind. If I did it all over again, I would probably just go with standard rivets - even though its hard for my brain to accept a non-smooth skin.
At the end of the day, anything that's a barrier to finishing and flying the airplane is a BadThing(tm).
--Noel
Sonex #1339 - Wings & Empennage Complete, Fuselage starting soon
Center-stick, TD, Turbo-Aerovee, Flush-Rivets, Aerobatic-Ailerons