Hi Mark,

That means individuals cannot do it alone anymore.

On Tue, Mar 3, 2015 at 3:13 AM, Mark Langford via KRnet
<krnet at list.krnet.org> wrote:
<snipped...>
>
> So yes, carbon fiber spars will almost certainly require more work than you
> can imagine to get past Engineering.  The few pounds you will save in the
> effort will likely cost years and thousands of BP.  But some people enjoy
> the chase and the sense of accomplishment at pulling it off, so feel free to
> blaze a trail for us...
>

I designed a small wing with big flaps. Actually double flaps and it
needs the rigidity of carbon fiber to work. The root chord is 38
inches and the tip is 24 inches. Wood just doesnt cut it for a max
gross of 900 lbs and a load factor of 7 G. A quarter inch thick 4 inch
wide cf spar cap is already overkill and that's way lighter than wood.
Besides Sitka Spruce is already approaching the price of Gold. Its
sustainable and all but nobody plants them anymore.

The fuselage need to be taller. The elevator needs to become a
stabilator. The vert needs to become an all moving rudder, Like the
Vee pee. The front fuse need to be shorter and straighter, 41 inches
wide and parallel to the firewall. And the landing gear leg needs to
be cf and really light and out of the prop wash.

The game changer for me in terms of carbon fiber is the flat tow
fabrics and reduced cost of triax. Its way better than the earlier
fabrics.

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