Hello All,
I've read here at HBA that you can fill a hole in aluminum pieces with an aluminum solid rivets to recover strength and prevent the hole from becoming a crack source.
First question: Is it necessary to fill that is no longer in the load path? In this scenario, I moved a bracket forward, so now there is an cantilevered aluminum angle extended beyond the load path. The stress flow would show that section to have little stress.
Second question: I have another scenario where a bracket is moved but the holes are still in the load path. the manufacturer says I should used AN bolts to "fill" the holes in the aluminum spar piece, but a solid aluminum rivet seems to make more sense. The other options are to use a stainless steel pop (standard), an aluminum pop (similar metal) as bulk, or stainless steel cherry max structural.
Just trying to understand the theory behind the path forward...
Thanks!
I've read here at HBA that you can fill a hole in aluminum pieces with an aluminum solid rivets to recover strength and prevent the hole from becoming a crack source.
First question: Is it necessary to fill that is no longer in the load path? In this scenario, I moved a bracket forward, so now there is an cantilevered aluminum angle extended beyond the load path. The stress flow would show that section to have little stress.
Second question: I have another scenario where a bracket is moved but the holes are still in the load path. the manufacturer says I should used AN bolts to "fill" the holes in the aluminum spar piece, but a solid aluminum rivet seems to make more sense. The other options are to use a stainless steel pop (standard), an aluminum pop (similar metal) as bulk, or stainless steel cherry max structural.
Just trying to understand the theory behind the path forward...
Thanks!