kevinh wrote: How are you handling the countersink or dimpling of the control surface hinges?
Kevin - I performed some tests early on with spare hinge material and determined that it's too thin to countersink (not even with a backing plate).
Instead, I've found that the following method works:
Buy a rivet squeezer (it doesn't have to be a fancy model, just a simple/basic one will do)
Buy a good set of pop-rivet dimple dies for the squeezer (I like the ones from Cleaveland Aircraft, but you can get decent ones from a few of the common suppliers).
Align, clamp, and drill your hinge-half to the structure as you see fit. Up-drill with a #32 or #31 bit.
Disassemble, Debur.
Take this hinge-half and assemble it to another hinge-half with hinge wire. Try to keep this hinge set "flat", which will keep the material straight while you work on it.
Use the rivet squeezer & dimple dies to dimple the hinge-half. This deforms the material evenly and you wind up with a nice fit.
NOTE: Many rivet-heads on hinge pieces are "out of the airstream" (often these are the hinge halves that attach to the control surfaces themselves, like the ailerons). For those hinge halves I recommend not dimpling and just using round-head rivets as-normal.
Enjoy!
--Noel