April 6, 2008 - Top Cowl Fitting |
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Today I turned my attention to the top cowl. First order of business was to cut out an opening for the oil filler access door. I marked with a Sharpie where to cut per the drawings. I triple-checked my measurements because I did not want to make a mistake. I don't know how much a replacement cowl would cost and I don't want to know. | ||||||
I made the cutout using the Dremel
with the heavy duty cutting wheel.
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And sanded the edges smooth. | ||||||
I placed the top cown on the airplane
for the first time. The next step is to trim the aft edge so it
butts up against the fuselage top forward
skin.
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The desired gap between the spinner bulkhead and the top cowl is 1/4". Plus the top of the cowl should be a little lower then the top of the spinner bulkhead because the engine will "sag" a little in the future. I duct-taped a wood block on top of the prop shaft to keep the cowl in the proper vertical position. | ||||||
I had marked a 2" reference line from the forward edge of the top forward skin. Now I used this line as a reference to mark where the top cowl needed to be cut so it would butt up agains the skin. | ||||||
Now cut along the red line with the Dremel tool. | ||||||
Then sand it
smooth.
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I taped little 1/4" wooden blocks to the spinner bulkhead to keep the top cowl at the proper spacing. | ||||||
I clecoed the backing strips to the
firewall flange so that the cowl would have something to rest on.
I'm going with the MilSpec camlocs, not the stock hinges. I had made
the backing strips a couple of months ago so they were ready to
go.
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After at least five iterations of fitting and marking the top cowl, removing the top cowl, trimming and sanding the top cowl, reinstalling the top cowl, it finally fit nicely. | ||||||