I hope that someone can learn from the mistake i just made, i am embarrassed because i know better. But having never screwed this up before.. i got cocky and thought i could pull it off. It bit me hard.
My wings have been on the fuselage for a few weeks, but with 1/4" bolts as i was waiting until i had the right tools to "properly upsize" them to 3/8". I spent about $100 on nice drill bits in 1/32" increments (9/32", 5/16", 11/32") and reamers in sizes .372", .373" and .374" so that i would have a range to get a nice fit. I took a piece of scrap 1" thick stock and drilled three practice holes, one in each of my final reamer sizes and checked the fit with my bolts. They both would not fit through the .372, could be mallet-ed into the .373, and fit nice and snug through the .374" hole. I had found my winner.
So i went on to step up in 1/32" increments which went relatively smoothly and then was sitting there.. .372" reamer in hand, questioning what i was about to do. A few thou under 1/32 was quite a lot for a reamer to bite off.. but i had done it many times before and been left with a nice hole. But those times had either been using a drill bearing or had something clamped down to the table of a drill press.. never by hand. "Eh.. ill figure it out" i said to myself. To make a long story short, and to spare the reader from the many expletives that were yelled, the hole went eccentric. The reamer could not follow the hole, and drilling those damn spar attach pin holes is awkward enough as it is.. if i had gotten it right it would have been from shear luck. The worst part of the story was that i was so angry at myself and not thinking clearly that i went on to repeat the exact same mistake on the other side.
Maybe it would have gone better if i had made that last 1/32" (shy) step using a jobber bit and then tuned the last two or three thou with the reamer.. but i cant say that i would ever recommend (or repeat) the "step up" method for this job. Drilling through three inches of metal with a hand drill and no good way ensure perpendicularity is a recipe for disaster. Jobber bits will follow the hole better than a reamer, but i think i just as easily could have screwed this up if i hadn't tried using a reamer.
I emailed Kerry and fessed up to my mistake. He told me the way that i should have done it was to use a counterboreing bit, part # 110266817 from McMaster Carr
http://www.mcmaster.com/#catalog/118/2452/=jcqn1a and done the upsizing in one step
He also pointed out that they strongly recommend dulling out the 1/4" pilot section.
This solution makes sense to me. The remaining hole at the end may be a tad oversized, but only by .001~.002 or so for most AN bolts. And even though it won't be a perfect, reamed hole, the sonex has plenty of margin in its design (no one's wings are ripping off, and due to the pain in the a$$ nature of this upsizing job, i am sure someone has screwed it up and still flown it without problems). If i could do it all over again.. i would use this method for sure.
The repair that i bought myself into is to remake all four wing attach blocks, the forward wing attach angle in the fuselage (definitely) and maybe the aft wing attach angles. I will have to cairfuly match drill the new wing attach blocks to the now existing .374" holes in my spars, but i will be able to do that off the airplane with a drill press/drill bushing so i am confident that will come out ok. I will then need to match the 3/8" hole that i am left with to the new wing attach angles in the fuselage. Man, that is going to suck.
-nick
Here is an example of what not to do.
Problem hole seen with the spar pin inserted
Repeating the same screw up, twice in a row. One of those classic moments in life where you just have to step back and say "yup, you're a dumbass"
ps. Something that i did right was ream out all of my 1/4" bolts using a .248" reamer. Makes a perfect hole for most AN-4 bolts.