Don,
I know many times it is hard conveying sentiment in written word. I often come across wrong myself (very often). It's a reflection of the modern texting world we live in. Quick written messages can't express context or light. You can't see the twinkle in somebody's eye or the red of their cheek when writing. I was pretty tired when I replied yesterday. It wasn't my best moment and my reply reflects as much so you deserve an apology too.
No offense taken and I am really glad to have the support of fellow ICS members such as yourself. Things are getting pretty tight in aviation these days and ICS membership has also waned so it's always good to have like-minded support from fellow Comanche brethren.
Since we're blowing some well-deserved sunshine, here's some quick photos of some of the Aussie Horn STC work we've been up to. I would encourage anybody to comment or let us know if they see anything we should fix or redo prior to release.
Cherry Picker used to apply gradual pressure while removing original horn from balance tube. This can also be used to disassemble the Australian horn later if necessary. The shiny cross tube in the horn is NOT the stabilator torque tube. That is an old Bonanza strut shoved through the horn we used for pulling:
Here's another:
Here are some holding blocks we made out of high-density plastic based on Biob Weber's wood block design as seen at the Webco tail seminars:
And some before and after priming shots:
We will follow with a quality Jetglo finish paint.
Important items I don't have pictures of yet:
Oven.
Dry ice chest.
Telescoping bore gauges and micrometers.
Loctite and reamer tool kit.
This STC is not for the casual do it yourselfer unless they are comfortable with precision measuring and handling oven-heated Aussie horn as it is assembled to a below-zero frozen balance arm all the while contending with heat-activated structural adhesive (we are batting 100 thanks to Charlie at Johnston). Care with the parts at every step is mandatory.
Jim