by wlarson861 » Sun Mar 12, 2017 1:56 am
The minimum thickness you can countersink is .040. Anything thinner should be dimpled. For a few dimples you can use a rivet. Make a back er to form the rivet into by countersinking some thick s of either hard aluminum stock or steel. drill deep enough to accommodate the shank of the rivet/die and countersink for the rivet and material to dimple. test on scrap till you're satisfied with dimple formed. The method is slow and takes time to fabricate the tooling, the rivet/die will dimple a few holes and have to be discarded. A squeezer and dies for solid rivets is much easier, a flush rivet set dies can be used to set the solid rivets for the nut plates. I'm with Bryan, I like the solid rivets for nut plates, they seem to fit better than the pulled rivets and are easy to squeeze or drive.
Bill Larson
N861SX
Sonex, polished, tail wheel, Generation 4 Jabiru 3300