I have been P-mailed enough about Oratex I thought I would share my experience so far, including the gotcha's as they arise. Like yesterday. Following the recommendation of a few, including the Oratex folks, I almost wasted a big piece of Oratex, due to a BH geometry issue that I didn't notice either.
Overall I like the product. I covered the tail pieces and gear last fall and it went OK. Simple shapes are extremely easy, going around curved sections requires a bit of work, and sometimes you need 4-6 hands, and I only had two installed as standard equipment.
The material is extremely tuff, and super easy to repair. No smell, overspray, sanding, respirators etc. But.............
The negatives so far are a combination of annoying, and maybe a show stopper for some.
I would say the annoying is the quality of the documentation. And that is coming from someone for whom documentation isn't that important. I usually only read it after I screw something up. The factory manual is very disorganized, comprised 50% of disclaimers on what not to do, and then translated somewhat poorly from German to English. I haven't looked for videos on youtube for about 6 months, but they were few and very poor in quality and technical accuracy. I wouldn't bother.
The show stopper might be the space requirements. For smaller bits like control surfaces a spare bedroom would be great. You need space for the control surface, AND space for you to lay out the fabric piece, apply glue twice, and let it dry. This space needs to be clean, and stay clean. No sanding, grinding, spray painting etc. If you are using your shop then the utility of your shop will be compromised while you cover. When you cover the fuselage (or wing on a fabric covered aircraft), you need space for the fuselage, and an equally big table to apply the glue to the fabric and let it dry. That is a lot of space that is tied up for quite a while, which is the other rub with the factory manual.
There are a lot of disclaimers about doing things exactly one way (very German) including disclaimers on how long you let the glue dry, which I have complied with. But doing that really drags out the covering process. It might take 5-7 days to cover one side of an aileron. Not that amount of man-hours obviously, but a lot of calendar days for one small part. To do a whole airplane in a reasonable amount of time would take a 2000 square foot shop with 4-500 square feet of floor space just for tables to apply and let Oratex dry. If you are doing 1 part at a time in a normal sized 400-1000 square foot, your shop will be tied up for a LONG time. Maybe a lot longer than traditional fabric and paint, even if the actual man-hours of labor are quite a bit less.
The factory has an installer, and they have folks all over the country that install their product professionally. My guess is they allow the glue to dry a lot less than what the factory specifies, otherwise they would go broke installing Oratex professionally.
Overall I like the product. I covered the tail pieces and gear last fall and it went OK. Simple shapes are extremely easy, going around curved sections requires a bit of work, and sometimes you need 4-6 hands, and I only had two installed as standard equipment.
The material is extremely tuff, and super easy to repair. No smell, overspray, sanding, respirators etc. But.............
The negatives so far are a combination of annoying, and maybe a show stopper for some.
I would say the annoying is the quality of the documentation. And that is coming from someone for whom documentation isn't that important. I usually only read it after I screw something up. The factory manual is very disorganized, comprised 50% of disclaimers on what not to do, and then translated somewhat poorly from German to English. I haven't looked for videos on youtube for about 6 months, but they were few and very poor in quality and technical accuracy. I wouldn't bother.
The show stopper might be the space requirements. For smaller bits like control surfaces a spare bedroom would be great. You need space for the control surface, AND space for you to lay out the fabric piece, apply glue twice, and let it dry. This space needs to be clean, and stay clean. No sanding, grinding, spray painting etc. If you are using your shop then the utility of your shop will be compromised while you cover. When you cover the fuselage (or wing on a fabric covered aircraft), you need space for the fuselage, and an equally big table to apply the glue to the fabric and let it dry. That is a lot of space that is tied up for quite a while, which is the other rub with the factory manual.
There are a lot of disclaimers about doing things exactly one way (very German) including disclaimers on how long you let the glue dry, which I have complied with. But doing that really drags out the covering process. It might take 5-7 days to cover one side of an aileron. Not that amount of man-hours obviously, but a lot of calendar days for one small part. To do a whole airplane in a reasonable amount of time would take a 2000 square foot shop with 4-500 square feet of floor space just for tables to apply and let Oratex dry. If you are doing 1 part at a time in a normal sized 400-1000 square foot, your shop will be tied up for a LONG time. Maybe a lot longer than traditional fabric and paint, even if the actual man-hours of labor are quite a bit less.
The factory has an installer, and they have folks all over the country that install their product professionally. My guess is they allow the glue to dry a lot less than what the factory specifies, otherwise they would go broke installing Oratex professionally.
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