by Bill Gaylord » Thu Feb 04, 2016 5:48 pm
Years ago I had to cut and remount a C150 wing, to correct the incidence. I would take the inner former from each wing, hold it against the mating former on the upper cabin and adjust into position. Then poke pins through the mating formers, in the front and rear of the formers. The further apart the better, for increased accuracy. Once the first one is in place, it would be used to set the other side with matched incidence. Since drilled holes tend to go off center, I'd actually glue the pin heads to the inner wing formers, creating locating dowels. Pins seem to be made from relatively soft metal also, so they could be cut shorter and resharpened with a file, before installing, so you wouldn't have an inch of pin sticking inside the cabin. Gluing a patch of balsa over the pin heads would ensure they stay in place and don't break the glue joint. The formers with the pins glued in place could then be used as the inner most former for each wing panel build, and you wouldn't be able to mix them up either, which is a good thing. I thought about doing this with my current Cub build, but the LC parts are accurate, so it shouldn't be much problem getting good wing-to-fuse alignment. With the die-cut kits, it's a different story.
Just read that the wings are covered, but I don't see why the indexing pins couldn't be installed from inside the cabin.