by n502pd » Mon Dec 16, 2019 10:59 pm
This I consider a safty of flight issue, because if I had not identified it prior to start, following a not so smoothe landing, I would have been is a great big world of caca. That last landing was including a smallish bounce, and was followed be a very normal roll out, parking and shutdown. Thirty min later, I climbed back in, strapped down, and sturred the stick per habit. That is when I very quickly noticed that the stick was severely restricted in the 'to the right' movement, ie, could not roll at all to the right if flying. Now what happened, I thought and was visuallizing the internals of the wings. Left roll was normal, so something has jambed the right aileron. I was tought to not necessairly force the issue, as if something was broken I might make it worse, if I was in the air. I wasnt. Returned to the hanger and found by thumping the wing tip end, that something was loose inside. LH tip, nothing, no noise. No matter what I did, I could not make the rh aileron go up. Finally, I was able to see into the tip of the wing, in the vacinity of the lead counterweight, which I had thought had come loose. I found a very large, monstrous sized, very hard mud daubers nest, maybe 6-8 in long and 3 in dia, lodged beneith the counterweight, causing the restriction! Very alarming, to say the least!. It appairently was jarred loose durring that last landing from further forward in the wing tip. I surely would have been in really deep do-do if this had happened durring any phase of flight. I could not get any part of the nest out via the small holes in the rear spar. so, here is what I did, and make the suggestion that others take heed, if they so choose, and do some sort of a visual inspection port for preflight.
I measured an area at the aft end of the fiberglass tips on both wings, about 6-8 ion long, and about 3 in at the aft and 5 in at the fore end to make a trapazodial opening just smaller than the swing area of the counterweight. I cleaned out the nest, and sparyed the interior with wd-40 to prevent more nests adhering. I then used nutplates and a clear lexan cover to close the hole. Now I have a great preflight look-see into a previously, totally inaccessable area, to ensure no restrictions are present. That area of the airframe, with a very critical moving component out of visual inspection, can not be seen, at any time. The wd40 application in this area is indeed added to the inspection list.
I highly recommend that others think about this senario, as I am not so sure I would be writting this if that nest had broken loose prior to the landing, elliminating any right hand roll control.
Pictures on request. PM me if needed.
Above all else,I consider myself a very live...careful?... chicken, and still have all my tail feathers intact!
Fly safe! And a very Merry Christmas to all, and Happy New Year!
Joe Nelsen
scratch built :D
Sirpeedee, N502PD, s/n 1510, Aero Vee 2.1 s/n 0870,
ADS-B in (Stratux)/out(SkyBeacon)
Flying @81.7
KGYI/N. Tx Reg/Perrin Field
EAA Technical Counselor, Chapter 323, Sherman, TX