Skin corrosion
Moderators: GAHorn, Karl Towle, Bruce Fenstermacher
-
- Posts: 2560
- Joined: Mon Apr 22, 2002 8:01 pm
Skin corrosion
After looking at the corrosion in the gear box casting thread I was just wondering what is the allowable percentage of skin thickness loss after clean up in .032 Cessna skins?
-
- Posts: 2560
- Joined: Mon Apr 22, 2002 8:01 pm
I thought it might be 15% for non-pressurized areas, 10% for pressurized skins. I've looked at an xp this weekend and I've never seen corrosion on a Cessna like this before. The paint was lifting (blisters) and underneath the metal, had turned to dust, with damage at least .010 deep The area was aft of the firewall on the belly and between the gear legs. There didn't seem to be a reason as in mechanical damage that would have allowed corrosive elements access to the alloy and yet it was spread out in small pockets everywhere in the skin. Its something you would expect beneath a galley or a Lav not aft and below the engine. Did Cessna have aluminium quality problems in the late 70"s? They certainly had good metal for our planes.
-
- Posts: 353
- Joined: Thu Jan 20, 2005 11:41 pm
was the corrosion downstream of the battery box drain? that can cause it, if they ever had a voltage regulator failure that caused overcharging of the battery
our airplane had some corrosion on the belly but that was from malathion or something from when my father-in-law used it as a sprayer. took some work to get paint to stick when I finally got around to fixing that but it did keep the mice away
our airplane had some corrosion on the belly but that was from malathion or something from when my father-in-law used it as a sprayer. took some work to get paint to stick when I finally got around to fixing that but it did keep the mice away

'56 "C170 and change"
'52 Packard 200
'68 Arctic Cat P12 Panther
"He's a menace to everything in the air. Yes, birds too." - Airplane
'52 Packard 200
'68 Arctic Cat P12 Panther
"He's a menace to everything in the air. Yes, birds too." - Airplane
-
- Posts: 395
- Joined: Wed Apr 23, 2003 10:48 pm
Intergranulation and other certain forms of corrosion can start at the manufacture of the alloy it can appear anywhere, this is why we inspect our aircraft no matter how old or new. Surface corrosion is up to us to prevent, control and treat.
Vic
N2609V
48 Ragwing
A Lanber 2097 12 gauge O/U Sporting
A happy go lucky Ruger Red label 20 ga
12N Aeroflex
Andover NJ
http://www.sandhillaviation.com

" Air is free untill you have to move it" BB.
N2609V
48 Ragwing
A Lanber 2097 12 gauge O/U Sporting
A happy go lucky Ruger Red label 20 ga
12N Aeroflex
Andover NJ
http://www.sandhillaviation.com

" Air is free untill you have to move it" BB.
- GAHorn
- Posts: 21295
- Joined: Fri Apr 12, 2002 8:45 pm
This sounds like filiform corrosion and is common after paint jobs that failed to properly clean and prme areas to be painted. Usually filiform can be nuetralized/treated with acid-etch, prime, and re-paint. Occasionally alodine is required. Only in severe cases is skin replacement or doublers required.c170b53 wrote:I thought it might be 15% for non-pressurized areas, 10% for pressurized skins. I've looked at an xp this weekend and I've never seen corrosion on a Cessna like this before. The paint was lifting (blisters) and underneath the metal, had turned to dust, with damage at least .010 deep The area was aft of the firewall on the belly and between the gear legs. There didn't seem to be a reason as in mechanical damage that would have allowed corrosive elements access to the alloy and yet it was spread out in small pockets everywhere in the skin. Its something you would expect beneath a galley or a Lav not aft and below the engine. Did Cessna have aluminium quality problems in the late 70"s? They certainly had good metal for our planes.
'53 B-model N146YS SN:25713
50th Anniversary of Flight Model. Winner-Best Original 170B, 100th Anniversary of Flight Convention.
An originality nut (mostly) for the right reasons.
50th Anniversary of Flight Model. Winner-Best Original 170B, 100th Anniversary of Flight Convention.
An originality nut (mostly) for the right reasons.

Cessna® is a registered trademark of Textron Aviation, Inc. The International Cessna® 170 Association is an independent owners/operators association dedicated to C170 aircraft and early O-300-powered C172s. We are not affiliated with Cessna® or Textron Aviation, Inc. in any way.