John,
Your replies appeared to be embedded directly in my original
text. I found out from Marv that
your comments were originally in blue, but that everything switches to black
when it posts.
I extracted what I found below
in << >>.
<<I
will send you one soon.>>
thanks. I'll look forward to it.
<<Our
early prototypes were quite sloppy because they were layed up by hand on a bench
and the notches were cut on a jigged tablesaw. Now the tolerances are very close and
there is little if any play in the hinges. I don't know how you could have found
a sloppy piece of Carbinge in a Legacy project as we
have been past the prototype materials for quite a few
years.>>
<<ID of the tubing is nominally
3/32" or .0925". The pins are .085"
OD. There is some variance in the
tubing ID, but this seems to be the best match to date. For cowling attachments some builders
need to go to a smaller diameter pin that we provide.>>
The movement I saw in that piece of Carbinge I examined is completely consistent with the
diameters you report. A 0.085” diameter pin inside a 3/32” sleeve leaves a gap
of greater than 0.008". This is
right in the middle of the tolerance range of new MS hinges. That diametrical difference is about
10%. At 10% the MS hinge got
hammered to death. I was looking
for something closer to 1 or 2%.
This drove me to the reaming approach and is why the reamed hinge shows
so little movement in the video
clip.
I couldn’t find any embedded response to the following two
questions:
BTW, what type Nylon are you using?
What load was applied during
the cycle test?
The load used for the
cycle test would be most informative.
Conversely, have you done a cycle testing at the 3000 lb/ft load rating?
Regards,
Chris Zavatson
N91CZ
360std
www.N91CZ.com