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		fritzsch(at)eskimo.com Guest
 
 
 
 
 
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				 Posted: Fri Jun 06, 2008 10:05 am    Post subject: Taking The Plunge | 
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				I have been following the list for about a year.  After deciding what 
 airplane to build, the next major decision was what tools to buy.  Tim 
 Olson's and Larry Rosen's web sites (along with several others) plus 
 much appreciated personal communication from both of them proved 
 invaluable.  The advice coincided well with the little flurry on tools 
 in March.  One suggestion I have not seen since monitoring the list is 
 to cover at least some of the shop floor with rubber matting to lessen 
 fatigue.  Costco carries it at a good price.
 
 I received my empennage kit in February planning to start building in 
 late spring.  I guess I am on schedule as I took the plunge on 
 Wednesday.  Unfortunately after cutting and deburring the rear spar caps 
 for the VS, I discovered a significant scratch on the VS rear spar.  I 
 hold an A & P certificate obtained at the University of Illinois in 
 1961, but I have not worked on aircraft since 1965.  Thus I sought 
 advice from one of our EAA tech counselors.  We both agreed that it 
 should probably be replaced.  I contacted Vans and sent them a digital 
 picture.  I received an immediate response that the scratch should have 
 been caught in the packing process and that a new spar was on its way.  
 Thus my experience so far is very positive.
 
 As others have said, this list is an extremely valuable resource.  I 
 look forward to leaning on it and hopefully offering some helpful input 
 an my project goes forward.
 
 -- 
 ~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~
 Dave Fritzsche
 40813 empennage
 Puyallup, WA
 ~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~
 
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		MauleDriver(at)nc.rr.com Guest
 
 
 
 
 
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				 Posted: Fri Jun 06, 2008 7:07 pm    Post subject: Taking The Plunge | 
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				Regarding rubber matting - I  bought (4) 2' squares and found it to be 
 perfect for covering my active 'foot print' while not getting in the 
 way.  I don't think a rubber floor in a shop  is a good thing but 
 standing on rubber is a joy.
 
 I spent my working career sitting on my butt so I've always focused on 
 sitting comfort.  Building is about standing a lot, and this flat 
 footed, weak kneed builder has found a pair of Sketcher sandals to be 
 the best tool in the shop.  Personal preference rules but a little 
 experimentation with the shoes and floor surface  seems more than 
 worthwhile.
 
 Welcome aboard.
 
 Bill "working on those pesky doors" Watson
 Durham
 
 David J. Fritzsche wrote:
  	  | Quote: | 	 		   
  <fritzsch(at)eskimo.com>
 
  I have been following the list for about a year.  After deciding what 
  airplane to build, the next major decision was what tools to buy.  Tim 
  Olson's and Larry Rosen's web sites (along with several others) plus 
  much appreciated personal communication from both of them proved 
  invaluable.  The advice coincided well with the little flurry on tools 
  in March.  One suggestion I have not seen since monitoring the list is 
  to cover at least some of the shop floor with rubber matting to lessen 
  fatigue.  Costco carries it at a good price.
 
 
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		Lew Gallagher
 
  
  Joined: 04 Jan 2008 Posts: 402 Location: Greenville , SC
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				 Posted: Sat Jun 07, 2008 2:49 am    Post subject: Re: Taking The Plunge | 
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				Hey Dave,
 
 Now that flooring has been mentioned, it really is a factor and we have used lots of carpet from when I replaced it in the house with hardwood floors.  We've used it not only for the cement floor in the garage, but also for the work table surface (put legs on half of the original shipping crate), and some of the cradles.  That cement  floor can be brutal (on the feet and also the back at times!), and now we've gone from sweltering heat in South Carolina to freezing cold (a propane heater works best for us), and now back to heat.  
 
 For the fiberglass work, I've carried over lots of the tools I use to work on automotive body work ... especially belt sander, random orbital sander, die grinder.  All of which can be pretty aggressive, but really make it easy.  In aligning the pre-punched holes, a jeweler's screwdriver and 3/32 punch have been invaluable.
 
 Later, - Lew
 
 Do not archive
 
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  _________________ non-pilot
 
crazy about building
 
NOW OFICIALLY BUILDER #40549
 
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