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Mon, Jan 07, 2019

Leesburg EAA Chapter In (Wing Rib) Stitches

Workshop Held At Leesburg International Airport Last Thursday

Members of the Experimental Aircraft Association had to learn how to rib stitch a wing by doing it. This was done at their hangar at the Leesburg International Airport in Leesburg, Florida on Thursday January 3, 2019. A good way to start out the new year.

It seems most of the members had never done this before as they had either built aluminum or composite aircraft.

They were using the Stewart System covering method so there was a lot of reading and YouTube videos to be reviewed.  They also looked at a couple of Poly-Fiber videos to learn how to rib stitch.

It is all well and good to watch videos but until you are the one pulling the rib stitching cord through the holes and tying the correct knots, the process doesn’t get fixed in your mind. They used a modified seine stitch to sew the fabric down to the ribs at 2.5 inch intervals.

This group of intrepid experimental aircraft builders just jumped right in and figured it couldn’t be rocket science so let’s give it a try.

The stitchers had a couple of AP’s overseeing their work but they had never done rib stitching either, so they were learning along with everyone else.

It is kind of like “see one, do one, teach one” an old medical school axiom that now seems to apply to airplane building. The exercise turned out to be a good learning experience and proof that if there is a will, there is a way to get things done correctly.

(Images captured by author Ted Luebbers and provided with EAA Chapter 534 news release)

FMI: eaachapter534.org

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