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RobC wrote:
I cannot believe it really says to remove bolts and then jack the outer panels. If they did not have cracks before the inspection, they are sure inviting them to occur by doing this.
bdk wrote
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I wholeheartedly disagree that you can cause any damage jacking in this way.
I agree with brandon; Cracking is caused by cycling. Whether that cycling is from vibrations, or by cyclical stresses. It is caused by a frequency. Metal fatigues and cracks when it is moved back and forth over time.
bdk wrote
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I wholeheartedly disagree that you can cause any damage jacking in this way.
http://www.boeing.com/companyoffices/do ... 000-02.pdf Note the description of Stress Corrosion Cracking (SCC). Newer alloys (like 7050) are less prone to this than those from the 1940s.
"There are many ways to prevent SCC. Design loads on the aircraft
must not exceed material threshold stress levels for SCC."
"It occurs when there is a sustained tensile stress, and exposure to a corrosive environment."
This true too, corrosion weakens metal, and if metal is weakened while onder a torsional, shear, tensile or compressive load; it will fail instantly.
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After reading and posting earlier today, I got curious as to the official word on the subject of jacking with bolts removed. When I got home, I consulted my T-6 Handbook Erection and Maintenance Instructions (AN 01-60F-2). Mine was rev. 16 August 1949. Jacking is addressed on page 23 and various permutations are described. No where is there any reference to jacking with bolts removed.
Although we use military maintenance manuals out of necessity, one must remember that the T-6 is a normal category aircraft. Unless someone here can show otherwise, there is no approved data for the procedure. Any IA contemplating an inspection using this dubious procedure should ask themselves, in accordance with what am I doing this? I would stick to the manual until/unless the FAA releases an Airworthiness Directive which authorizes this procedure. One man's opinion, of course. The usual caveats.
That's conservative. However, I have no reason to believe that this will actually cause a crack. I wouldn't call it dubious, but I also don't know how it would help eitther. We don't need to rely on the FAA for everything. They set minimum standards only. If you want to go above their standard, you can go to an aerospace engineer, and have the parts in question analyzed using the latest stress analysis methods.