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Ralf,
I am not a professional but I think that you need to cut the tanks open and reseal them.
Lloyd Dunlap (work lloyd.dunlap@tema.toyota.com, home ladunlap181639mi@comcast.net) (mobile 810-217-3407, home 810-225-9113) lives in Brighton, Mi and had a problem with his tanks from (I believe) auto fuel. You might ask him what he did to solve the problem.
Feathers
From: <bronnenmeier@GROBSYSTEMS.COM>
Date: August 15, 2008 4:25:36 PM GMT-04:00
Dear subscribers,
I need some help/advise. I purchased a used IVP with 250 hrs. It did not look very nicely and I knew that it needed some work. I had a pre purchase inspection/anual done at Lancair and they confirmed that everything was in a working condition and that the airplane was safe to fly. Based on this I made my purchase decision.
I took the airplane apart and I am rebuilding it right now (I did not have the money for a new kit). After painting the wings we got a paint bubble during the buffing in the sun. I dug into bubble and found some of that brown rubber under the primer (the sealer that is used to seal the inside of fuel tanks - unfortunately I decided to just grind of the original paint and leave the primer on) I decided to grind of all the paint and primer around my leading edge and found that brown rubber stuff on several spots along the leading edge. After removing the rubber I found wet spots in the carbon fiber. After looking at the wing closer I found blue stains on the very outside of the leading edge (visible by looking into the wing after removing the winglets). This probably should have been found by Lancair during the annual/pre purchase inspection.
.
.
Ralf Bronnenmeier
Bluffton, OH 45817
Phone: (419) 369 12 33
E-mail: bronnenmeier@grobsystems.com
--
Lorn H. 'Feathers' Olsen, MAA, ASMEL, ASES, Comm, Inst
DynaComm, Corp., 248-345-0500, mailto:lorn@dynacomm.us
LNC2, FB90/92, O-320-D1F, 1,400 hrs, N31161, Y47, SE Michigan
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