rmorton Posted January 30, 2017 Share Posted January 30, 2017 So I have read the instructions and it says there are 3 rivet sizes, but in the box there are significantly more! the picture shows what I got in the kit, can anyone hazard a guess at what a,b,c,d,e are? c and d, I think are the A5's but they are very slightly different. For the fin assembly I need the A5 and flat head rivets for the rudder hinge brackets. Answers on a postcard... Link to comment Share on other sites More sharing options...
IBob Posted January 30, 2017 Share Posted January 30, 2017 So I have read the instructions and it says there are 3 rivet sizes, but in the box there are significantly more! the picture shows what I got in the kit, can anyone hazard a guess at what a,b,c,d,e are? c and d, I think are the A5's but they are very slightly different. For the fin assembly I need the A5 and flat head rivets for the rudder hinge brackets. Answers on a postcard...[ATTACH]48061[/ATTACH] [ATTACH]48062[/ATTACH] Can I suggest that you post here in one thread (or a selected few), rather than starting a new thread for every question? That will keep your postings in one (or few) places and make it far easier for yourself and others to follow your progress. I find the continuous threads here very useful in my build, the only drawback being that some of them are so long, it can be a slow business finding the part you want. Accordingly, I made my own posts by aircraft section (roughly), but that still sees my build scattered around here, and I don't now think it's the best idea. I could have been using the search function here a lot more than I was initially. As for the rivets, what they mean (I think) is that there are 3 diameters of blind rivet. Almost all the construction is done with those A4 and A5 which you have large quantities of. The manual very occasionally calls for the other (much smaller quantities) of different size/head/length rivets, as they are required. So you can get out the two large bags of A4/A5, and put the rest away until they are called for. You may or may not have the A3 countersink/flat rivets called for, which is pesky as they are required immediately on the fin (where many of us start). 1 Link to comment Share on other sites More sharing options...
IBob Posted January 30, 2017 Share Posted January 30, 2017 A single thread also works for you like this: Once I (or anyone else) responds or posts to your thread, then the site assumes we want to 'follow' your thread, and sets that automatically. What that means is that, every time you post after that, we are notified with a little red flag up to the left there. So if you stick to one thread, those people interested in your thread will be notified every time you post to that thread. There are other options here: we can, for instance, choose to 'follow' a particular member, regardless of where he/she posts. But the above happens automatically. Link to comment Share on other sites More sharing options...
rmorton Posted January 30, 2017 Author Share Posted January 30, 2017 Thanks Ibob, I see what you mean about the threads, they are very confusing. Will leave this one to die and keep the coming home one for the questions. Can a moderator merge them? You are also right that the majority of rivets are the A4(3.1mm) and A5(3.8mm) (I have wrongly marked them up in the picture) there are a smaller bag of A3(2.5mm) marked as "a" in the photo. "b" is a 3.2mm flat head, "c" no idea, "d" flat head A5(3.8mm), "e" no idea Link to comment Share on other sites More sharing options...
IBob Posted January 30, 2017 Share Posted January 30, 2017 Thanks Ibob, I see what you mean about the threads, they are very confusing. Will leave this one to die and keep the coming home one for the questions. Can a moderator merge them?You are also right that the majority of rivets are the A4(3.1mm) and A5(3.8mm) (I have wrongly marked them up in the picture) there are a smaller bag of A3(2.5mm) marked as "a" in the photo. "b" is a 3.2mm flat head, "c" no idea, "d" flat head A5(3.8mm), "e" no idea That's a good question, and having written that post, I was wondering the same thing: I should like to pull my stuff together, or link it in some way. I'll ask Admin. The pic is too small to see your rivets clearly, but they will sort themselves out: the 'odd' ones are either a different head, or longer, or steel, or painted. 1 Link to comment Share on other sites More sharing options...
KRviator Posted January 30, 2017 Share Posted January 30, 2017 C looks like an LP4-3 rivet D possibly a CS4-4, a bit hard totell if it is countersunk from that angle. A3, possibly a MK-319-BS? Check out page 5-31 of This document, courtesy of the good folks at Vans. Link to comment Share on other sites More sharing options...
Kyle Communications Posted January 31, 2017 Share Posted January 31, 2017 The majority of rivets are 1/8 and 5/32 there are a few that are countersunk..THESE GO IN THE RUDDER/FIN POST there are some that are stainless steel and some longer for the windscreen and a few others. Its frustrating but keep a keen eye on the and sort them separetely..they are all used somewhere Link to comment Share on other sites More sharing options...
Savannah58 Posted February 19, 2017 Share Posted February 19, 2017 So I have read the instructions and it says there are 3 rivet sizes, but in the box there are significantly more! the picture shows what I got in the kit, can anyone hazard a guess at what a,b,c,d,e are? c and d, I think are the A5's but they are very slightly different. For the fin assembly I need the A5 and flat head rivets for the rudder hinge brackets. Answers on a postcard...[ATTACH]48061[/ATTACH] [ATTACH]48062[/ATTACH] A4 and A5 most common especially A4. Other bags might have flat heads for various applications. There will be a bag of large shiny A5 STEEL rivets used on forward lower cabin. If memory serves me correctly this is the only place those are used. Link to comment Share on other sites More sharing options...
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