I had just laid up the Spinner and Spinner backing plate. I had to wait 72 hours for my resin system to cure sufficiently to be able to trim and sand it. That is very important!! I mounted the spinner backing plate on my Lathe. I then made a self centering coupler for the tip of the Spinner. I used this coupling to mount the spinner to the arbor. After a little tweaking I was able to dial the spinner in with less than .004" of run out.
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cutting prop hub hole |
this is a live shot of the running lathe. I am cutting the prop hub centering hole. I mounted the backing plate between two wooden plates. The hole in the plate was larger than the center shaft. This allowed me to adjust the outside run out with a dial indicator. once it was perfect, I drilled 4 holes and bolted the plate to the wood backing plate. this locked it in for good. Once the backing plate was spinning true, I set the spinner in position.
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mounted on engine |
Unfortunately I don't have any pictures of this procedure. but the idea was to get it true and mounted then drill 4 holes for a 3/16" cleco and locate the parts. Here its shown mounted on the engine.
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side view |
here is a side view. I couldn't locate the cowl until I had the spinner mounted. The top surface needs to fair cleanly into the spinner loft.
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3/4 view |
this is my favorite view. The inlet is still rough trimmed, and the cowl has not been sanded. You can see the witness line where the upper cowl mold was attached to the lower cowl mold.
that's it for now.
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