skippydiesel Posted 18 hours ago Posted 18 hours ago My blade type transponder antenna has suffer a mishap. A wombat (due to space limitations can only have been a wombat) has used the antenna as a convenient scratching post In the process, neatly separated the composite blade from its base. Blade filled with some sort of tough glassy looking material, with very thin antenna wire in centre. Need to remove glassy material to replace wire antenna. Looks like an easy repair, however glassy material resists drilling. Added pressure resulted in drill bit departing side of fin - not good. Replacement, with same unit, north of $400, so well worth repairing. Hoping that someone has been down this track before me and knows how to remove glassy material, without further damage to blade casing. All constructive suggestions welcome😈
skippydiesel Posted 17 hours ago Author Posted 17 hours ago 5 minutes ago, Kiwi said: Not what you are asking, but. Thanks Kiwi - Way ahead of you. Just don't like scrapping things that may be repairable.😈
skippydiesel Posted 17 hours ago Author Posted 17 hours ago (edited) 18 minutes ago, Kiwi said: I have one of these on my Rans S6S. Seems to work well. They all work. I had this Rod and Ball type on my last aircraft - poxy things don't put up with careless overenthusiastic aircraft cleaning. After the second snap, made my own. Easy to do. BNC Type Connector bases available from JayCar ( & others) for $1-$8, depending on type selected. Short length of copper wire (same length as original R & B). Some heat shrink. You have a functioning flexible Transponder antenna. Just not a "flash" looking as a Blade or R&B type. 😈 Edited 17 hours ago by skippydiesel
onetrack Posted 16 hours ago Posted 16 hours ago Skippy, forget trying to repair it. The material is Acrylonitrile styrene acrylate (ASA) and it is specifically designed to be bullet proof. As with potting mixes around electronic components, it is designed to be unrepairable. These tough products resist every type of attack - including drilling, or even chemical dissolution. You will destroy the antenna, trying to repair it. Read about ASA's properties on its Wikipedia page. It certainly hurts having to replace a relatively expensive item that has suffered simple damage, and which appears at first glance to be repairable. But the deeper examination just shows repairability is not an option. Just bite the bullet. I trust you've taken steps to prevent further investigative animal attacks. Rodents are also a major concern in this area. https://www.ozpilot.com.au/product/harrys-hm109b-blade-antenna/ https://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Acrylonitrile_styrene_acrylate 1 1
skippydiesel Posted 15 hours ago Author Posted 15 hours ago Thanks Onetrack - Expensive mistake; About 12 months ago, I saw evidence of wombat using the underside of my Sonex as a "rubbing post". No damage, just mud a hair. Errected an electric fence around aircraft. Did the job - no more nocturnal visits. Having to rotate batteries, remove/ replace fence "gate" was a pain- in- the- rectum. After 12 months, I thought that the local wombat(s) had been trained to stay away from the Sonex but Nooooo! Such is life. 😈 1
BurnieM Posted 10 hours ago Posted 10 hours ago I understand wanting to repair but repaired antennas never work as well as a new one and some perform very poorly indeed. 1 1
facthunter Posted 9 hours ago Posted 9 hours ago Electric Fences can be solar Powered with it's own small Battery. Most animals hate even a small electric shock. Nev 1
skippydiesel Posted 5 hours ago Author Posted 5 hours ago 5 hours ago, BurnieM said: I understand wanting to repair but repaired antennas never work as well as a new one and some perform very poorly indeed. Are you speaking from experince? An antenna that is made or repaired, to the same dimensional, material & connection standards, as the original, will perform just as well. 😈
BurnieM Posted 5 hours ago Posted 5 hours ago (edited) 12 minutes ago, skippydiesel said: Are you speaking from experince? An antenna that is made or repaired, to the same dimensional, material & connection standards, as the original, will perform just as well. 😈 Yep. Almost all antennas are made on automated line to close tolerances in temp and moisture controlled environments. Save yourself a years troubleshooting why you have poor performance and just buy a new one. Edited 5 hours ago by BurnieM
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