Designed in 2005 by Bernard Burton Assembly manual 2005 - Bernard Burton DRAFT 1
The plans can be requested via this link http://www.gundersonaerodesign.com/m12plansreq.htm The laser kit is available here http://www.gundersonaerodesign.com/. Gunderson AeroDesign is a company located in Vista, CA dedicated to the radio controlled aircraft hobby. Note This assembly manual is not intended to tell you how to build this aircraft, each builder has their own approach to building. This is only a guide which will show you how we built our Spirit of Pitts. Use it if you feel that it may help. NOT ALL STEPS ARE SHOWN IN THIS MANUAL. Disclaimer This plane and plans are intended for ADVANCED BUILDERS and PILOTS ONLY! The user shall determine the suitability of the product for their intended use, and shall assume all risk and liability in connection therewith. The builder assumes all risk of injury when building this plane. 2005 - Bernard Burton DRAFT 2
Fuse: Step 1: Prepare the fuse sides S1. - Glue the 3 fuse side sections together. Use a long straight edge to assure alignment along top edge. - Glue the front side doubler S2 on S1 with 30 epoxy and let the epoxy cure. Note: Be sure that you prepare one right side and one left side. Step 2: Glue the former doubler F2a on F2 with 30 epoxy. The second F2 former does not require to be doubled. Let the epoxy cure. Step 3: Build crutch assembly, upside down, on a flat workbench. We can not emphasize enough the importance of building this crutch square and also the alignment to the print. (This is as important as building a straight wing). The flat surface of the formers should be placed on the workbench. Glue with 30 epoxy the formers F5, F2, F2 (doubled), F3 and F4 on their respective places on the fuse sides S1. Be sure your start with F5 first. Verify and eventually adjust the alignments and let the epoxy cure. 2005 - Bernard Burton DRAFT 3
Helpful hint: Use a piece of scrap foam or balsa to hold the fuse sides out against the formers while you glue the formers in place. Step 4: Glue F1 and then C1 in place. Before the 30 epoxy cures, glue C3 (fuse front bottom) and C2 (fuse front top) on their place. Verify and eventually adjust the alignments and let the epoxy cure. Step 5: Glue the S1 doublers between F1 & F2 and between F2 and F3 on the outsides of F1. This is to re-enforce the position where the wing struts are attached. Step 6: Glue F6, F7, F8 and F9 in place. Verify and eventually adjust the alignments and let the epoxy cure. Step 7: Join the formers with balsa sticks: 2005 - Bernard Burton DRAFT 4
- Glue two 10x10 mm Balsa sticks on the lower right and left former slots from F1 up to F9 - Glue two 10x10 mm Balsa sticks on the upper right and left former slots from F1 up to F9 - Glue one 10x10 mm Balsa stick on the top former slots from F6 up to 3 cm behind F8 - Glue one 10x10 mm Balsa stick on the bottom former slots from F5 up to F9 - Glue one 10x10 mm Balsa stick on the bottom former slots from F2 up to F2 - Glue four 5x5 mm Balsa sticks on the top former slots from F6 up to the end of the fuse (F9) - Glue four 5x5 mm Balsa sticks on the former slots (top half) from F6 up to the end of the fuse - Glue four 5x5 mm Balsa sticks on the former slots (bottom half) from F5 up to the end of the fuse (F9) - Glue four 5x5 mm Balsa stick on the former slots (bottom half) from F2 up to F2 Step 8: Prepare the removable canopy: - Put the canopy formers FT1, FT2, FT3, FT4 and F6a on their place according the plans on the fuse. Do not glue the formers on the fuse. - Glue the 5x5 mm & 10x10 mm balsa sticks on the formers according the plan. Pay attention that the lower 10x10 mm stick is going up to F6a. Do not glue the stick on the fuse. - Glue A1 and A2 onto the 10x10 sticks according the plan and glue the 5x5 mm sticks between the formers - Cover with 2 mm balsa sheet according the plan drawings - If you have a Fiberglass or Carbon canopy then glue it on its place on the removable canopy frame. - Step 9: Finalize the fuse structure: - Glue the rear landing gear re-enforcement at the bottom of the fuse sides on the back-end of the fuse - Glue F9 (wing fuse fixation) in place with 30 epoxy. Re-enforce with triangular balsa on the inside and outside of the fuse sides. 2005 - Bernard Burton DRAFT 5
Step 10: Prepare the landing gear cover: - Glue the F1a formers together via 10x10 mm and 5x5 mm sticks - Cover with 2 mm balsa sheet. - The landing gear cover must fit in the fuse landing gear hole but should not be glued on the fuse - Cut the landing gear cover at the level of the fuse landing gear exit. Step 11: Cover the fuse: - Prepare the covering sheets by gluing the required number of 2 mm balsa sheet and required length side by side. This operation can easily be done with CA glue when the sheets are placed on a Wax paper. - To allow easy sheet wrapping around the fuse, you can spread an Ammoniac-Water mixture on the balsa sheet. Wrap the wet sheet in place and let it dry for a night - Use CA glue to glue the balsa sheets according the plan drawings with special care for the wing join. Step 12: Elevator and rudder assembly: - On a flat workbench, build the elevator and rudder panels using a copy of the plans. Use polyurethane glue for maximal robustness. - Use 10x10 mm hard wood for the leading edge of the fix rudder and elevator parts. - Glue the rudder (fixed part) on the elevator (fixed part) at 90 with 30 epoxy. Reenforce the glue join with triangle spars. - We recommend using 3mm Pin-hinges for the rudder and elevator articulations. - Check the fit on the fuse but do not glue on the fuse at this stage. 2005 - Bernard Burton DRAFT 6
Step 13: Prepare the motor cowl - Prepare all the cowl concentric rings (CR1 CR8) by gluing their sub-parts with CA glue. - Glue the concentric rings together as showed on the plan with 30 epoxy. Verify and eventually adjust the alignments and let the epoxy cure. - Glue all the 5x5 mm sticks between the three CF rings. Verify and eventually adjust the alignments and let the epoxy cure. Helpful hint: The length of the cowl should your motor length and/or its position to allow plane balancing - Wrap the cowl with 2mm balsa sheet. Glue with 30 epoxy. - Sand the concentric rings on the outside to have a smooth & curved cowl noose - Wait until the motor is installed before adjusting & fixing the cowl on the fuse 2005 - Bernard Burton DRAFT 7
Upper wings: Step 1: Prepare the top left wing: - On a flat workbench, prepare & protect your plan. - Pin the lower main spar on the plan - Glue all the wing ribs on the lower main spar (Hard wood 10x10 mm) according the plan. W1-W2-W3-W4-W9 should be glued with 30 epoxy. Other ribs can be glued with polyurethane glue. Pin the rear rib alignment tabs on the workbench to guarantee a straight wing trailing edge - Proceed with the upper main spar (Hard wood 10x10 mm) as well as with the top 5x5 mm balsa spars - Glue the 10x10 mm Balsa leading edge and the balsa trailing edge - Proceed with all remaining 5x5 mm balsa spars (upper & lower) - To prevent wing torsion, glue 2 mm balsa re-enforcement between the upper and lower main spars (vertical fiber direction) - Cover the wing with 2 mm balsa sheet according the plan - Glue the rib caps. Note: During the previous steps, always verify and eventually adjust the alignments before the glue cures. - Prepare the servo support assembly and glue it in place. Consider that the servo arm is on the lower side of the wing - Install the optional wing tip if required. Use the small balsa square triangles to reenforce the wing tip fixation. - Prepare the aileron: pin a 2mm balsa sheet according the plan. Glue the aileron ribs (small & long triangles). Re-enforce at the position of the control horn. Put the leading edge spars (square & triangle) and cover the top with a 2 mm balsa sheet. - Put a wire in the wing to ease the servo wires installation at a later stage. - When the glue is fully cured, remove the wing & aileron from the workbench - Glue W9a & W9b plywood ribs on W3 & W9 with 30 epoxy. The tabs should be placed on the lower side of the wing - Remove the rib alignment tabs. Except the W1 & W9 alignment tabs. - If your job is well done, the wing should rest on the four wing fixation tabs and stay perfectly straight. - Continue to cover the wing with 2 mm balsa sheet according the plan but ensure that you can still access W1-W2-W3-W4 ribs to glue the wing tubes at a later stage. Step 2: Prepare the top right wing following the same instructions as here above. Step 3: When the right & left upper wings are ready, proceed as follow: - On a flat workbench, align the wings and glue the right & left half wing tube sockets in place with the aluminum tube inside. Do not glue the aluminum tube in their sockets. Note: a dry assembly could be required to ensure a perfect alignment before gluing. - Verify and eventually adjust the alignments before the glue cures - Close the right & left wings with the remaining 2mm balsa sheeting - Remove the remaining alignment tabs. - - Glue the remaining rib caps - At this stage, the wings alignment should be perfect: straight & not twisted. The eight wing fixations tabs should rest on the workbench without any constrains. - Sand the leading edges. - Your top wing is ready. 2005 - Bernard Burton DRAFT 8
Bottom wings: Step 1: 1) Prepare upper left wing: - On a flat workbench, prepare & protect your plan. - Pin the lower main spar on the plan - Glue all the wing ribs on the lower main spar (Hard wood 10x10 mm) according the plan. W1B-W2B-W3B-W9 should be glued with 30 epoxy. Other ribs can be glued with polyurethane glue. Pin the rear rib alignment tabs on the workbench to guarantee a straight wing trailing edge - Proceed with the upper main spar (Hard wood 10x10 mm) as well as with the top 5x5 mm balsa spars - Glue the 10x10 mm Balsa leading edge and the balsa trailing edge - Proceed with all remaining 5x5 mm balsa spars (upper & lower) - To prevent wing torsion, glue 2 mm balsa re-enforcement between the upper and lower main spars (vertical fiber direction) - Cover the wing with 2 mm balsa sheet according the plan - Glue the rib caps Note: During the previous steps, always verify and eventually adjust the alignments before the glue cures. - Prepare the servo support assembly and glue it in place. Consider that the servo arm is on the lower side of the wing - Install the optional wing tip if required. Use the small balsa square triangles to reenforce the wing tip fixation. - Prepare the aileron: pin a 2mm balsa sheet according the plan. Glue the aileron ribs (small & long triangles). Re-enforce at the position of the control horn. Put the leading edge spars (square & triangle) and cover the top with a 2 mm balsa sheet. - Glue W9a plywood ribs on W9 with 30 epoxy. The tabs should be placed on the upper side of the wing - Put a wire in the wing to ease the servo wires installation at a later stage. - When the glue is fully cured, remove the wing & aileron from the workbench - Remove the rib alignment tabs except the W1b & W9 alignment tabs. - Continue to cover the wing with 2 mm balsa sheet according the plan but ensure that you can still access W1-W2-W3-W5 ribs to glue the wing tubes at a later stage. Step 2: Prepare bottom right wing following the same instructions as here above. Step 3: When the right & left bottom wings are ready, proceed as follow: - On a flat workbench, align the wings and glue the right & left half wing tube sockets in place with the aluminum tube inside. Do not glue the aluminum tube in their sockets. Note: a dry assembly could be required to ensure a perfect alignment before gluing. - Verify and eventually adjust the alignments before the glue cures - Remove the remaining alignment tabs. - Close the right & left wings with the remaining 2mm balsa sheeting - Glue the remaining rib caps - At this stage, the wings alignment should be perfect: straight & not twisted. The four tabs (wing fixations) should rest on the workbench without any constrains. - Sand the leading edges. - Your bottom wing is ready. 2005 - Bernard Burton DRAFT 9
Plane geometry parameters: Wingspan 175 cm Length 175 cm Airfoil E169 (14.5%) Wings surface 119 dm² Weight 6.5 Kg (estimated) Wing load 54 grs / dm² (estimated) Top wing incidence: 0 Bottom wing incidence: 0 Elevator incidence: 0 Motor down trust angle: 0 Motor right trust angle: 2 Plane geometry alignment: Step 1: Align the bottom wing: - Put the wing in place. - Verify and adjust the wing position: o The distance between the trailing wing tip and the end of fuse must be the symmetric for left and right wings. o The wing horizontal axis must be perpendicular (90 ) with the vertical fuse axis. o The wing incidence compared to the fuse axis = 0 o Drill the wing fixation holes in S9. Glue the screw fixing nut with 30 epoxy. o Verify and eventually adjust again the alignments before the glue cures. Step 2: Align the elevator/rudder assembly: - Fix the bottom wings with Nylon screws. - Align the elevator/rudder assembly with the bottom wing: o The distance between the trailing wing tip and the trailing elevator tip must be the symmetric for left and right. o The wing horizontal axis must be parallel with the elevator horizontal axis o The elevator incidence compared to the fuse axis = 0 o Glue the elevator/rudder assembly with 30 epoxy o Verify and eventually adjust again the alignments before the glue cures. Step 3: Align the top wing: - Screw the wings struts on the bottom wing with 3mm screws - When the top wing is positioned on the fuse wing struts, the holes in the wing fixations tabs should be perfectly aligned with the fixation holes on the wing struts without any kind of constrains. This is the demonstration that your plane is build straight. - Fix the top wing with 3mm screws. o The distance between the trailing wing tip and the end of fuse must be the symmetric for left and right wings. o The wing horizontal axis must be perpendicular (90 ) with the vertical fuse axis. o The top wing horizontal axis must be parallel with the bottom wing horizontal axis o The wing incidence compared to the fuse axis = 0 2005 - Bernard Burton DRAFT 10
Center of Gravity: The plane should be centered at 25% of the median chord or 147 mm from the leading edge of the top wing. The Center of Gravity can be moved backward for 3D acrobatics. 2005 - Bernard Burton DRAFT 11