Bryan Cotton wrote:Welcome to the forum, and congrats on your Sonex!
If it was me, I'd inspect as much as possible from the outside and through the rib tooling holes. If nothing scared me horribly I would leave it and keep going. There is a lot of margin in the airplane. But if it keeps you up at night, then go for it.
The challenge is drilling out all those rivets without causing more damage. Unlike solid rivets, some percentage of pops will spin. If you can get to the tails with vise grips, no problem.
Before you sell the classic A model short, sit in both. I don't have B model envy at all. The A model should be lighter.
Hopefully soon we will have ADSB out and will be going to KMSN for our passport stamps.
Badger830 wrote:If you haven't been already, I also highly recommend flying to KJVL and visiting Bessie's Diner.
Badger830 wrote:Good Evening Sonex Builders,
First of all, I want to thank everyone for your contributions to this site; it has been an invaluable resource over the last few weeks as I've been researching Sonex kits and the process of completing one.
I had an opportunity fall in my lap to purchase an abandoned kit that was originally owned by a local high school's aviation technologies class. The kit is an original Sonex design circa 2006. While the kit is missing some of the original components, it was priced accordingly and, to be honest, too good of a deal to pass up.
The students enrolled that were enrolled in the program managed to complete the ailerons, flaps, tail surfaces, and just started on some of the spar tasks. While I'm planning on pursuing a B model conversion kit, I'm considering drilling out the skins of the already completed components to inspect the internal structures.
On one hand, the completed components look to be in good shape. On the other hand, I was able to identify some mistakes on completed (but not yet installed) wing parts. Would the brain-trust recommend removing the skins from the completed components for inspection or leaving them as is (since they appear to have gone together fine). Thanks to all of you in advance for your advice and I look forward to continuing to learn from this great resource!
Bryan Cotton wrote:I flew the entire family in a rental C172 to the restaurant before Bessie's back in 2013, right after we moved here. Tim Stearns from Kenosha was also there that day in his Waiex, and that is really what inspired me to go the Waiex route. I had always liked the Sonex design and the philosophy behind the airplane, but on the ramp that day I realized that the Waiex really looks cool!
Sonerai13 wrote:Hello "Badger"!
Since you are in WI, I am not far away from you (once I get back north from Texas). If you can wait about a month before you get itchy to start drilling out rivets, I would be happy to stop over and take a look at what you have. Don't drill out those stainless steel rivets unless you absolutely have to. they are a gold-plated bi*ch to drill out! Not impossible, but it takes patience (and a lot of SHARP drill bits).
PM me and we can maybe set something up.
Sonerai13 wrote:they are a gold-plated bi*ch to drill out! Not impossible, but it takes patience (and a lot of SHARP drill bits).
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