I'm building my horizonal stabs. Making the trailing edge tubes that have the bushings for the elevator hinged to bolt to. I made the first one. Not 100% happy with it. drilled the 3/8 holes and made the bushings to be welded into them. where I am having trouble is figuring out a way to get my punch marks for the holes to be in the EXACT same clock position --- one to the other. The first one I'm off by about 2 or 3 degrees. Just enough that I can see a slight difference when I put 4 inch bolts through the bushings.
Here is how I did it but there must be a more precise way.
i have the tube in the holding blocks and fastened down to the table. I took steel blue and inked the tubes. Then I took a long stainless steel ruler and bridged between the LE and TE tubes-- and scraped the surface of the TE through the ink making a mark at 12-Oclock through where each hole goes.
Then I center punched each hole that was facing up where I scraped through the ink. Then I flipped the tube over and made a paper measuring tape to wrap around the tube to find the exact opposite side and made a sharpie line lengthways down the tube representing the 180 degree clock position. Then I moved the tube into the lathe. I put a spring wire with a needle point in the tool post. i aligned the point with the punch mark. Then I scratched a ring around the inked tube and made a circle around the tube that passed through the punch mark. Then --- that circle and the longitudinal sharpie mark intersected where I needed to make my 2-nd punch mark.
That kind of worked but I am off just a little on the first one. Apparently my first two punch marks were not perfectly lined up with one another.
So how- do I punch two marks in the tube and keep them EXACTLY at the same clock position with each other ?????? does anyone have a good idea for this ?
( I think I can move my holes in the first one if I have to--- but I wanted a perfect interference fit between the bushings and the tube. )
Anyone see a solution here ?
Tim
Here is how I did it but there must be a more precise way.
i have the tube in the holding blocks and fastened down to the table. I took steel blue and inked the tubes. Then I took a long stainless steel ruler and bridged between the LE and TE tubes-- and scraped the surface of the TE through the ink making a mark at 12-Oclock through where each hole goes.
Then I center punched each hole that was facing up where I scraped through the ink. Then I flipped the tube over and made a paper measuring tape to wrap around the tube to find the exact opposite side and made a sharpie line lengthways down the tube representing the 180 degree clock position. Then I moved the tube into the lathe. I put a spring wire with a needle point in the tool post. i aligned the point with the punch mark. Then I scratched a ring around the inked tube and made a circle around the tube that passed through the punch mark. Then --- that circle and the longitudinal sharpie mark intersected where I needed to make my 2-nd punch mark.
That kind of worked but I am off just a little on the first one. Apparently my first two punch marks were not perfectly lined up with one another.
So how- do I punch two marks in the tube and keep them EXACTLY at the same clock position with each other ?????? does anyone have a good idea for this ?
( I think I can move my holes in the first one if I have to--- but I wanted a perfect interference fit between the bushings and the tube. )
Anyone see a solution here ?
Tim

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