3D printed avionics part

Peter Ha

Pre-takeoff checklist
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Hey folks,
When you break plane parts, do you create and 3D printed them?
I'm new to world of aviation but see a need for 3D printing non-certified parts.
Recently, I got C150 which need new lock cover; which I'm creating/printing. There's also scanning option available(Ipad Structure Sensor) to laser-scan an object, transfer as stl file, clean-up then print them.
In my other hobbies, I've measured and created parts I needed using using free software like Fusion360 or Tinkercad. Then print it or order from vendors like shapeways.com.
I've done this for Ipad mounts, RAM mounts, broken handle, etc.
https://www.thingiverse.com/thing:3566043

Wonder if others who already 3D printed things?
I'm able to 3D print materials infused with: nylon, carbon-fiber, wood, rubber, glass. There's other printers that prints edible soy-based filaments, and medical 3D printers that print organs and dental orthodontics.
 
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The air vents on a cherokee are a common 3D part. There are other parts that make sense, such as knobs on 50 yr old avionics when the company no longer exists.
 
I'm new to world of aviation but see a need for use of 3D printing non-certified parts.
FWIW: Don't know what you mean by "non-certified parts" but you may want to familiarize yourself on the types of parts one can install on a Type Certificated aircraft first, before you get carried away. While there is a path in Part 21 under "owner-produced parts" there are some specific steps that must take place to include how the part is installed.
 
FWIW: Don't know what you mean by "non-certified parts" but you may want to familiarize yourself on the types of parts one can install on a Type Certificated aircraft first, before you get carried away. While there is a path in Part 21 under "owner-produced parts" there are some specific steps that must take place to include how the part is installed.

Other then my RC planes... I don't plan on 3D printing trim tabs, oil-filter, air-filter, seat-belt locks, vacuum relief-valve, etc.
Having said that... the world of 3D printing is evolving quick.
There's now full-scale 3D printers that prints bridges in concrete and/or metal.
In few years we might see full-scale 3D printed planes... that YOU print at home (home-built will take on whole different meaning LOL) :)
 
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The air vents on a cherokee are a common 3D part. There are other parts that make sense, such as knobs on 50 yr old avionics when the company no longer exists.


I would actually like to find some of those vents that have been 3-D printed. As you know, those things are "waffer thin" and are very fragile.
 
I would actually like to find some of those vents that have been 3-D printed. As you know, those things are "waffer thin" and are very fragile.

Hence if someone already created one, we can share the 3D file (*.stl) like word or excel documents for pilots to print at home for pennies. :)
Here's someone creation for Cessna trim-wheel:
https://www.thingiverse.com/thing:2806090
 
As long as we're on the subject, I'd like someone to come up with a vent with a means to attach a flexible hose so Cherokee pilots can point it where they want it instead of the ankle and lower leg.
 
Another idea: Since we don't really use the back seat vents all that much - using the same flexible hose adaptation, design a seat with vents so the rear vents can vent the front seats. I have air conditioned seats in my truck, it isn't outside the realm of possibility.
 
Keep in mind the material you use when 3D printing. If you are feeding PLA into an FDM printer, keep in mind that it has a heat deflection temperature around 50C at 0.46 MPa (66 PSI). That's not much. Plus, it tends to be susceptible to UV.
 
Keep in mind the material you use when 3D printing. If you are feeding PLA into an FDM printer, keep in mind that it has a heat deflection temperature around 50C at 0.46 MPa (66 PSI). That's not much. Plus, it tends to be susceptible to UV.

PETG or ABS has higher heat tolerance
 
ABS is frequently found in aircraft too and is generally accessible to most 3d printers. Up from there you have Polycarbonate and Nylons which start getting harder to print and then you get into the Ultems and PEEK, PEKK and some stupendously high temperature resistance and similarly challenging printing and pricing.

Depending on your needs(especially size) some of the Resin printers may be a better solution if you have high temp needs.
(High being relative to plastic, not aviation in general)
 
ABS is frequently found in aircraft too and is generally accessible to most 3d printers. Up from there you have Polycarbonate and Nylons which start getting harder to print and then you get into the Ultems and PEEK, PEKK and some stupendously high temperature resistance and similarly challenging printing and pricing.

Depending on your needs(especially size) some of the Resin printers may be a better solution if you have high temp needs.
(High being relative to plastic, not aviation in general)

You forgot glass.
https://ceramics.org/ceramic-tech-today/glass-1/3d-printed-glass-where-are-we-now
Do I see Formlab's resin printer in my future? :D
 
ABS is frequently found in aircraft too and is generally accessible to most 3d printers. Up from there you have Polycarbonate and Nylons which start getting harder to print and then you get into the Ultems and PEEK, PEKK and some stupendously high temperature resistance and similarly challenging printing and pricing.

Depending on your needs(especially size) some of the Resin printers may be a better solution if you have high temp needs.
(High being relative to plastic, not aviation in general)
Tough PLA is a lot like ABS but still retains the ease of use of PLA.

Printing HTPLA and then annealing it is another option for higher temps.
 
Not sure I have flown any 3d printed parts yet. But this year is looking promising. Have a connector cover printed for my backup battery cable adapter. But will only fly that if I ever need to use my backup battery. Have cover printed for the bottom of my rudder hinge bracket to prevent moisture from getting into it. Might fly that this year.

On the other hand I have printed a number of prototype parts to check fit and functionality prior to fabricating the airworthy metal parts.
But then my aircraft is certified experimental.

I have also printed some tablet holders and RAM look style ball mounts but I have not used one in an airplane yet. Although did print a custom Ball mount for one of my students that he has been using.

Brian
 
I've been working with a friend on some recognition light mounts for the Mooney. Pretty cool stuff... As long as the FAA will sign off on the 337. ;)
 
I've been working with a friend on some recognition light mounts for the Mooney. Pretty cool stuff... As long as the FAA will sign off on the 337. ;)

Well, that's not exactly that hard... This one is still the melty-plastic prototype. And hasn't been cut to shape.

D83A441A-C69C-4A08-A8F0-6FBD1B8D75BF.jpeg
 
Well, that's not exactly that hard... This one is still the melty-plastic prototype. And hasn't been cut to shape.

View attachment 82668

We're taking a different approach. We're not trying to mimic the reflector that's on the existing light. We're trying to get one of Whelen's 71325 light units:

71325_1080x.png


... to fit inside the lens. That involves removing the existing bracket/cover that holds the light in and shortening it by about 3/4" at the fore end. Here's a test fit - 3D printed part is bright red so very easy to see! We didn't want to clip wires, so the old cover/bracket/light (in black) is hanging below:

IMG_4524.jpg
 
Kent - that there looks like some good planning. Keep us posted!
 
We're taking a different approach. We're not trying to mimic the reflector that's on the existing light. We're trying to get one of Whelen's 71325 light units:
... to fit inside the lens. That involves removing the existing bracket/cover that holds the light in and shortening it by about 3/4" at the fore end. Here's a test fit - 3D printed part is bright red so very easy to see! We didn't want to clip wires, so the old cover/bracket/light (in black) is hanging below:

Yea, I'm taking the significantly lazier approach. It does mean qualifying the bulb for voltage, RFI and temperature. And after temp testing I see the bulbs generally self limit to 100C, which means I'm looking at materials that will tolerate 150C. Which means the light project is now on hold while side-project #28: Upgrade a printer to handle high temp materials. is being worked on.
 
Yea, I'm taking the significantly lazier approach. It does mean qualifying the bulb for voltage, RFI and temperature. And after temp testing I see the bulbs generally self limit to 100C, which means I'm looking at materials that will tolerate 150C. Which means the light project is now on hold while side-project #28: Upgrade a printer to handle high temp materials. is being worked on.
Proto Pasta heat treated composite brass-PLA. Good to 150C.

https://www.proto-pasta.com/products/brass-metal-composite-htpla
 
3d Yoke bearing/support View attachment 82625
I actually made (from Delrin) a yoke bearing for my 172. The originals are crap, and I couldn't get one at the time, so I just made one, and our mechanic installed it. Better than new. I can't recall if I made two, but given my propensity for symmetry, I likely did.
 
Hence if someone already created one, we can share the 3D file (*.stl) like word or excel documents for pilots to print at home for pennies. :)
Here's someone creation for Cessna trim-wheel:
https://www.thingiverse.com/thing:2806090

Plastic covers and cabin air vents is one thing, but trim wheels seem to be getting into an area that one needs to approach very cautiously. Just because it’s plastic doesn’t mean it can be safely reproduced with the same characteristics as the original. The foray into producing aircraft parts has its limitations and producing primary and secondary flight controls with 3D printers without proper engineering evaluation (and FAA approval) can lead to dangerous and legal consequences.
 
For those of you who know more than I about 3D printing (pretty much all of you, I suspect), is there a way to 3D print an interior light lens for a car or an airplane? They always get brittle as the get old, and replacements are so often either (1) impossible to find, (2) incredibly expensive, or (3) so old they're almost as bad as the dissolved one they replace.

Ideas?
 
For those of you who know more than I about 3D printing (pretty much all of you, I suspect), is there a way to 3D print an interior light lens for a car or an airplane? They always get brittle as the get old, and replacements are so often either (1) impossible to find, (2) incredibly expensive, or (3) so old they're almost as bad as the dissolved one they replace.

Ideas?
Short answer... yes.
I’ve already done this for coworkers and friends who broke or lost pieces of appliance or car parts.
Usually they give me the broken part and I measure it, then create a close match using Fusion360
 
Plastic covers and cabin air vents is one thing...
FYI: even those types of parts can be in a gray area especially when it comes to annual time and aircraft conformity. Even with the Part 21 owner-produced path there's guidance out there that puts some 3D printing outside the "elementary operations" portion of the major repair/alteration definition.
 
Which 3D printers are you folks using? Any delta or coreX users?
Do you use large platforms (12in or bigger) mostly FDM or resin?
 
Which 3D printers are you folks using? Any delta or coreX users?
Do you use large platforms (12in or bigger) mostly FDM or resin?
I have an original MakerSelect v2(200mm x 200mm x 180mm) with minimal changes which I use primarily to print 3d printer parts and random prototypes.
I have a beastly Ender 5 plus which can print huge(350 x 350 x 400), but I haven't yet printed anything huge. It will eventually get dual extrusion and a 4 way splitter for 5 different filaments but right now it's doing the polycarbonate parts for printer #3.
And I have a middle child Ender 3(220 x 220 x 250) which is the one being stripped down and rebuilt as my high temp printer. It's getting a liquid cooled dual extrusion hotend, liquid cooled steppers, remote mount parts cooling, high temp belts, maybe high temp microswitches, new motherboard and power supply.
 
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