HarvardIV wrote:
I am aware that Titanium is harder on milling equipment, and has a different thermal expansion coefficient. With that aside, would the angle hold up?
My last post on this subject... Yes it would hold up. Would the adjacent structure? Titanium is much stiffer than aluminum. It could cause a stress concentration in the wing skins and stiffener attachments because the attach angle would not flex as much (be as soft) spanwise. Why keep trying to reinvent the wheel?
IF the problem is with the radius, increase the diameter of the fillet radius slightly and use a large radius on your counterbore cutter as Glenn W. suggested.
I still see no evidence that there is ANY problem with the attach angle design. This could have been a fatigue fracture, but again, I have no information as to any damage history or to how the aircraft was operated over its entire lifetime. There could have been a flaw in the original part, who knows?
And finally, without seeing the blueprint (anyone have a copy?), I suspect the extrusion was annealed, stretch formed, heat treated, straightened (hot or cold?), routed to shape, and then drilled.
Is the original part 2024 or 7075? If 7075 you might be able to make it from 7050 which is much more resistant to stress corrosion cracking. But why? A new part from Lance is much cheaper and will last another 60 years. What more do you need?