What is this?..............
That is a bad way to start the day. It's a big pile of aluminum shavings from me drilling out some freshly installed rivets that Andy and I banged in the tail gunner's section a few weeks back. As y'all probably remember, I have been making forward progress on the tail gunner's doors, but have been running into some pretty significant hurdles along the way. The door prototype has been working surprisingly well on the tracks that I made, but horribly on the factory tracks. It looked and sounded as if the corrugated skin of the prototype was hitting the rivet heads on the side of the fuselage. I tried several different versions of spacers and such to go under the roller assemblies to try to aleviate the problem, but nothing was working.
So this morning, I took a big step backwards. I decided to remove the aft section of skin that we had just recently secured in place. You see, the factory kind of screwed me when they took the old tailgunner's position out, because they apparently screwed up the original 1/8th inch rivet holes and put these big, honkin' 3/16 inch rivets in their place. What that did was made the new rivet heads so large that they were interfering with my new doors (or so I thought). So the idea was to remove the old skin completely and replace it with a new one, along with making doublers on the inside to accept the old size 1/8th inch rivets. The first step was to get the rivets drilled out.........
Cool action shot (notice the chips flying

).......
And once the rivets were all out, the pieces were removed........
Now once the skins were removed, I tried to slide the prototype door in the track. If my theory was correct about the big rivets, then the door should've slid with no interference whatsoever..........it didn't. The door still had interference. However, as it turns out, the removal of the skins wasn't a fruitless effort after all. What it did was enable me to see what the heck was going on in the factory tracks that was causing me all of this grief and loss of sleep. After some close inspection, I noticed that when the factory reinstalled the tailgunner's door tracks (why, I don't know, since they just covered them back up....must've been a strength issue), they used pan head rivets to hold the tracks in place, rather than flush rivets. So what was happening was that my rollers were just barely striking the heads of the rivets as they went by, which was making it feel and sound as if my corrugated skin was hitting the rivets on the side.
This discovery was the breakthrough I needed! Since there is no way in heck I'd ever be able to successfully drill out the pan head rivets in those tracks and replace them with flush ones, I simply just modified my rollers to make them slightly thinner. This relatively simple modification made all the difference in the world. The prototype door slid easily now, almost like it was.......well, almost like it was on rails.
So the next step was to graduate from the prototype door and muster up the courage to actually build the first
real door. It's quite a bit longer than the prototype and also has the outer skin attached to it, so I must admit that I was a bit nervous about how it would work. Well, it didn't take too long to get the first door built, although there are still two smaller sections that I've yet to fabricate for each end. But for now, the first section is working well. Not as good as the smaller prototype, as it still requires a bit more effort to slide the door back and forth, but it's still easily done with only one hand.........
There is a slight bind in the door when it transitions around the little "S" curved portion of my tracks. I can only assume (and hope) that this slight binding can be remedied by some fine tuning and lubrication later on down the road. But for now, I'm pretty happy with the results. Wow, did I just say I was pretty happy???

That hasn't happened much lately, but it's nice to have a stroke of good luck for a change. Hopefully, the luck will stick around, as I'm officially down to 5 weeks before the unveiling......with about 3 months of work to get done.
I've decided to go ahead and leave on a good note today, so I'll check in with y'all tomorrow.
Gary