Posting some pics of the new Hanger. This is as far as I going to go for the winter. Time to move into the garage and start working on the Fox.
Posting some pics of the new Hanger. This is as far as I going to go for the winter. Time to move into the garage and start working on the Fox.
Kurt A
Kitfox II,
Rotax 912,
1100 gross
Fixer Upper Project
Yep.... we see the "termination dust" on the ground out in front... you got a lot done... looks great!
Grover Wright
Flying a KF IV-1200
ROTAX 912UL
Your "toy box" looks great.
I like the rod on the left. Need to pull her out and post a couple of pictures.
Paul Zimmermann
LSRM-A
Garland, Texas
That is truly awesome! I have a big barn but none of the doors are wide enough to get her out with the wings unfolded. I looked into hiring a company to give me some material specs to build a header and supports, but they were stupid expensive for just a piece of paper. I was also thinking of a "lean to" a bit smaller than your hangar, but once again, I get humbled by span width and load numbers. I would love to have a place I can keep her out of the rain and hail during the summer with the wings out and locked ready to go when I get home from work. I was thinking pre-fab joists about 40' wide...
Jay
I want 850 HP in my Kitfox, then it would be a KickB * * T. Oh sorry I'm a life long gear head!
Paul Zimmermann
LSRM-A
Garland, Texas
Thanks for all the Kudo's guy's. Yes it is a 40 ft span on the inside. Beams are not engineered but are built very strong. Pretty much solid 24 inches deep X 6 1/2 thick with laminated 2X10 and OSB glued and screwed together. I have a string stretched across all three beams to keep an eye on things as the snow load comes.
Kurt A
Kitfox II,
Rotax 912,
1100 gross
Fixer Upper Project
Kurt,
Your hangar appears to be about the same dimensions as mine. The major difference in the roof structure is your center beam. It divides the weight of your roof by three rather than my two. Mine has a typical gable roof with the ridge running side to side. Half the roof weight at the span is on the back wall and half is the over the door beam - also laminated wood.
I have a bit of permanent sag that gets worse as the air dries in summer and levels out a bit as the air re-humidifies during winter - not getting worse from year to year.
The door is two tall typical garage doors with a movable center post - seen at the right in the first image. The post is on a track and moves to the right after pulling a pin and rotating it rearward to disconnect the locking pins at the top. This sometimes is a challenge in summer as the post will scrape the floor during the unlatching.
Last edited by HighWing; 11-21-2014 at 06:31 PM.