daleandee wrote:No idea whether it is true or not but I've heard several times that the stock valve covers, painted black, will give better cooling than the aftermarket chrome bolt on ones.
daleandee wrote:Your cowling work looks great. Just remember that it only has to be "perfect enough" for you. When you do a 200 mph (OK 197) sheep clearing pass, hardly no one will see the small imperfections anyway ...
:lol:
tonyr wrote:Ah ok.. was just about to send you the cowling pages
Cheers
T
Timwaiex0146 wrote:Hi Everyone ! Im in the middle of my cowling installation and would like to add a few comments > It is by far the hardest project in building our waiex so far. I started with the right side and was amazed , we fitted it in about two hours with hardly any cutting and fitting, just popped right on there. The left side was a different story entirely ! It was too short by about half an inch along the top where it fits up against the windshield. So, after thinking about it a bit we started cutting the side back and moving it back . eventually we got it on and back almost to the windshield line. Took quite a bit longer than the right side , but still , not too bad. We thought we were pretty much done and were wondering what everyone was so excited about. Then we tried to put them on TOGETHER !!! SURPRISE !!!! the bottom curves of the halves were totally different ! Cutting back the left to make it fit on the top caused the bottoms to be about an inch and a half off front to back. Needless to say we started adding fiberglass where we removed it and ended up almost back where we started cutting it off. We also had to add the half inch to the top that was missing in the first place. After getting them to roughly line up front to back along the bottom they would still not come together all the way. we ended up using metal straps along the joint to hold it together and fiberglassing the bottom halves together. they were about 5/8 of an inch short. we found that we could force them together but they would have been so tight that you would never have gotten the pins in the hinges without two guys pushing on the sides and another one hammering the pin in . Once it was together it was easy to slide the whole cowl on and off to trim the sides and drill the holes for the hinges. I firmly believe the two halves I received from the factory were different lengths. the left was shorter front to back and both were tooo narrow to come together on the bottom. The most important lesson I can pass on is make sure the bottom lines up Before you start trimming the sides ! You can't tell if you just follow the plans directions and do one side and then the other. Its like sculpting a bowl of jello, theres no place to start because you have to get each measurement right and each one affects the next. You have to keep going back and forth between the sides top and front and nibble away at it. The factory could sure help by putting out a video on doing this. Not some four minute blurb either. Something that shows the common mistakes and how to avoid and fix them. That would have saved us a solid weeks work glassing and trimming and re glassing. Tim K Waiex 0146
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