I like After Action Reviews… they are usually structured something like: “What was supposed to happen, what did happen, good stuff, bad stuff, and how to make the ‘supposed to’ and ‘did’ line up next time.” I consider these reviews to be just as important to a homebuilding project as a military operation, and I suspect – judging from the number of ‘here’s how I did that’ videos on YouYube – others do as well. These notes are an attempt to provide some lessons learned along the way to producing the 160 airworthy ribs needed for a Patrol wing. The usual caveat applies: what worked for me may not work for anyone else. Buy some extra aluminum in anticipation of trialing methods and tweaking the process to make them work FOR YOU, though, should you choose to run with any of these methods, and certainly before committing to production.
If these notes appear to duplicate various ‘here’s how I did it’ docs and builder site posts, consider it an endorsement of that particular technique and a shout out of ‘good on you!’ to the authors. I apologize ahead of time where I have failed to give appropriate credit where due (e.g., the inventor of the VAF flange straighter is still unknown to me, so I credited the site, instead), and feel free to drop me a message or email. Also note that this is not a step-by-step exposition, but instead a collection of notes on what worked and what needed some tweaks. Maybe someday…
Finally, the choices I made on tools and methods had as much to do with what worked as my own background and skill set. There are a lot of ways to get this stuff done, but methods that were extensions of my approach to woodworking and guitar building (mixed hand and machine methods) seemed most comfortable for me. Take these notes as one more set of data points to be used…or further tweaked!
For those that prefer to avoid navigating through an archipelago of posts, the PDF is attached.
Note: the title of the thread was adjusted due to some drift in topic and the need to keep things as searchable as possible for members.
If these notes appear to duplicate various ‘here’s how I did it’ docs and builder site posts, consider it an endorsement of that particular technique and a shout out of ‘good on you!’ to the authors. I apologize ahead of time where I have failed to give appropriate credit where due (e.g., the inventor of the VAF flange straighter is still unknown to me, so I credited the site, instead), and feel free to drop me a message or email. Also note that this is not a step-by-step exposition, but instead a collection of notes on what worked and what needed some tweaks. Maybe someday…
Finally, the choices I made on tools and methods had as much to do with what worked as my own background and skill set. There are a lot of ways to get this stuff done, but methods that were extensions of my approach to woodworking and guitar building (mixed hand and machine methods) seemed most comfortable for me. Take these notes as one more set of data points to be used…or further tweaked!
For those that prefer to avoid navigating through an archipelago of posts, the PDF is attached.
Note: the title of the thread was adjusted due to some drift in topic and the need to keep things as searchable as possible for members.
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