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Painting

PostPosted: Wed Jul 05, 2017 12:39 pm
by neflyer48
Should the control surfaces be removed before painting an airplane? Has anyone painted with them on?


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Re: Painting

PostPosted: Wed Jul 05, 2017 4:22 pm
by kevinh
Removing them is easy and I think getting a good paint job with them off would be easier as well.

Re: Painting

PostPosted: Wed Jul 05, 2017 4:41 pm
by kmacht
Yes. You will want to remove them. You will get all sorts of runs and dry spots while trying to spray the rear spar with the control surfaces attached. The paint will also bridge the hinges and crack when dry. At a minimum you will have to pull the ailerons to rebalance them after painting. Don't balance before you paint otherwise you will have to add lead back on to offset the paint weight.

Keith
#554

Painting

PostPosted: Wed Jul 05, 2017 6:26 pm
by neflyer48
kmacht wrote:Yes. You will want to remove them. You will get all sorts of runs and dry spots while trying to spray the rear spar with the control surfaces attached. The paint will also bridge the hinges and crack when dry. At a minimum you will have to pull the ailerons to rebalance them after painting. Don't balance before you paint otherwise you will have to add lead back on to offset the paint weight.

Keith
#554

Thank you for the advice guys. I will remove them.


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Re: Painting

PostPosted: Fri Nov 10, 2017 5:35 pm
by johnnn
I am ready to rivet my Onex ailerons. Would it be ok to paint the ailerons and then rivet the hinges on top of the paint? I know it would look nicer. Also, I don't want paint clogging the hinges. But is it acceptable to have a layer of paint between the hinges and the aileron.

Re: Painting

PostPosted: Sat Nov 11, 2017 10:16 am
by sonex1374
John,

You could rivet the hinge on after painting, but it's really simple to keep paint out of the hinge loops if they're already riveted on. Simply insert an old hinge pin and a scrap section of piano hinge onto the aileron hinge before painting. The pin and scrap hinge will keep the paint from pooling inside the hinge loops. Chances are you've got some extras of both laying around. If you do get paint inside the loops, you can make a reamer from a spare hinge pin. Flatten the last 1/4" of the hinge pin to about 2/3 it's normal diameter, then grind the end of the pin back to just about the end of the flattened section. What you'll get is a slightly wider, flatter hinge pin, with a sharp, square face on it. Chuck this pin into a hand drill and spin it into the paint-clogged loops. The square face will ream the insides and clean out your hinges.

Jeff

Re: Painting

PostPosted: Thu Sep 16, 2021 2:04 am
by Skippydiesel
For a whole of aircraft paint job, what surface area you are using to determine the amount of paint required

Re: Painting

PostPosted: Sat Sep 18, 2021 1:11 am
by Skippydiesel
Come on, surely someone made a conservative estimate, of their Senex exterior surface area, before they purchased the paint

Re: Painting

PostPosted: Sat Sep 18, 2021 10:22 am
by Bryan Cotton
Skippydiesel wrote:Come on, surely someone made a conservative estimate, of their Senex exterior surface area, before they purchased the paint

Perhaps not! I polished, and kept buying more until I was done.

Would be easy enough to figure out. If you do it be sure to post it for the next person!

Re: Painting

PostPosted: Sat Sep 18, 2021 5:46 pm
by Skippydiesel
Bryan Cotton wrote:
Skippydiesel wrote:Come on, surely someone made a conservative estimate, of their Senex exterior surface area, before they purchased the paint

Perhaps not! I polished, and kept buying more until I was done.

Would be easy enough to figure out. If you do it be sure to post it for the next person!



Thanks mate - by the time I find out the aircraft will be mine/or not and my efforts to budget will have come to zero.