1. I almost choked on my tongue when I read AJSalemi’s last statement about techs “crimping blind fasteners to improve fit"!!! As a production Liaison engineer and as a field engineer I have see “similar attempts to make fasteners work by shit-house engineers! Altering fasteners not an artisan’s “trick-of-the-trade”… it is non-standard [unacceptable] practice that provides a feel-good measure to believe that a fastener works, when it does NOT... and is a guaranteed way to fail parts in-service under light operational loads. In the case of blind-fasteners this can definitely interfere with full installation [proper formation of the tail] due to increased friction [since tail is blind... You may never see how irregularly they were installed].
WARNING: NEVER ALTER ANY FASTENERS without intimate familiarity with their function! I just happened to have spent a LOT of time discussing fastener installation, removal and performance with many OEM [manufacturer’s] fastener engineers*... and discovered [obviously] that fasteners perform PREDICTABLY only when installation and usage variables are rigidly controlled by the TECHNICIANS. I wish I could attach a cartoon to make this point. Sub-title: “Who really determines the strength of a fastener??" Shows an engineer, a metallurgist, a processor [for fastener fabrication] and a BIG-LUG “man with a wrench” [mechanic]. [courtesy of SPS]
*** MIL-HDBK-5 Committee engrs for Cherry, Huck, Fairchild [VSI], SPS, Hi-Shear, Monogram, Allfast, JO King, Boeing, McDonnell-Douglas, Grumman, etc…
One thing I discovered Years ago was the truth of: “In-God-We-Trust... All Others Will Be Investigated”
Aircraft quality workmanship means accomplishing work to the engineered standards that the specific aircraft was built to... and to all other converging standards [maintenance, repair, etc]. If tech data requires “X”, then “X” or “X+” must exist, otherwise the work does not meet aircraft standards. Integrity is everything and is the basis of aviation. As AJSalemi indicated, this can be violated by deceitful actions, up-front and pass inspection... but the evidence of poor engineering or workmanship is guaranteed to surface in loose fasteners, cracks, corrosion, etc... up-to and including catastrophic failure.
2. Regarding blind fasteners in inlets… and other critical applications: I emphasize that blind fasteners should be substituted for other type fasteners only on a very thoughtful basis... not only can the engineering strength and DURABILITY of the joint be compromised, but if failure occur, and FOD can damage or destroy an engine . It is amazing what a small/hard piece of metal can do to a $2M engine in a blink of an eye [especially titanium].
2.1 General Practice has been to match existing fastener installations in FOD critical structure, such as engine inlets, for (2) reasons: fastener performance [strength/durability] is predictable and designed into the assy; and the fasteners are “mechanically locked so that” potential for fastener disintegration is minimized. If blinds were originally used [typical many years ago], “no sweat”... just apply good engineering sense and analysis for replacement parts... and be FOD aware! Otherwise be very careful!!!
2.2 WARNING: engine inlets are subjected to severe vibration loading [long-term fatigue], severe loading due to compressor stall/stagnation conditions and environmental abuse [erosion/corrosion]. I have witnessed OBVIOUS fastener failures and cracking that caused significant engine damage [turbine & piston]! In other cases I have seen enough damage within inlets that had the potential to generate FOD. I am a believer!!!
2.3 I have used blinds in engine inlets, under very strict controls as follows:
a. NEVER EVER use aluminum-shank blinds rivets and (ANY) JO-BOLTS in inlets, unless specified in the repair manuals.
b. Always use Steel, CRES, Monel or Titanium OVERSIZE pull-type blind-rivets or bolts [plated or coated, wet with sealant or primer]. I prefer MONEL or CRES Cherry-Max [NAS9307-thru-9313] and "MS" style blind-bolts [MS21140/21141/90353/90354] due to their very predictable installation and in-service performance. BE CAREFUL: ALL BLIND FASTENERS MADE TO THE SAME SPEC BY DIFFERENT VENDORS MAY NOT PERFORM THE SAME DUE TO MANUFACTURING & TESTING VARIATIONS!!!!!
c. Holes MUST be within specified tolerances or the installation is doomed to fail [pull/tear-thru, loosening, cracking, fastener-head failure, etc]. NOTE: Anytime structure is disassembled and a new fastener must go into an “old hole”, the old hole MUST be oversized and have a matching fastener installed. Driven rivet-holes can be enlarged significantly [+0.008” typ]… to meet this intent… and the same diameter/type rivet installed by slightly harder driving to swell a rivet to fit [within specific limitations]. ALL other repair requirements MANDATE drilling/reaming hole(s) to match selected O/S fastener(s). PERIOD. NOTE: almost every blind fastener comes in an oversize equivalent… use it!!!
d. Inlet skin and substructure must fit tightly against each-other, IE: NO VISIBLE GAPPING [could be the reason WHY you are patching the skin… or replacing fasteners prematurely!!!
Regarding blind fasteners use, in-general.
3. I worked for the USAF and NOW for a major manufacturer… and have noted distinct differences in philosophy regarding fasteners. These differences are most notable in a field environment and at the depot for the B-52/KC-135/E-3 acft.
a. Acft T.O.s and T.O. 1-1A-8 consider blind fasteners like “another tool in the maintenance tool-box.” The technology is clearly illustrated and is “well-known to all”. Use is encouraged and “wide-open” to any specified fastener”… especially when expedience is required. It must be noted that the expectation is that these field repairs will be reviewed by experts during depot maintenance, every 4—7 years… which allows some room for poor repair jobs to “survive long-enough to get aircraft to depot”.
b. The OEM [aircraft manufacturer] has an aversion to using blind fasteners, due to durability issues. This influences [prejudices] depot practices… forcing them to lean towards “driven solids”. ALSO a lot of structural rivets on these jets were “ice-box [DD] rivets… which are very high strength [Fty & Ftu]. Most “aluminum blinds” compare favorably to the [Fty] of “AD” rivets… which have substantially lower strength than “DDs” [~80% of DD]. A lot of “aluminum blinds” have been improperly substituted for DD rivets by untrained techs, especially in critical structure. In these T.O.s there is a specific ratio defined for installing “aluminum blinds” in-lieu-of “DD solids”; it varies from (5)-BR for-every (4) DD, up to (6) BR for-every (4) DD. For a 1 : 1 replacement, the structure is already compromised.. even with 1/64-O/S BRs. NOTE: “weakness” in blind rivet usage is NOT well understood [or even known] by most techs… so problems persist. In some highly loaded areas vibration loads are critical… blinds are NOT APPROVED what-so-ever since they have failed prematurely.
Regarding blind fastener installation.
HINT: Regarding in-service inspections for fastener, and “other”, damage: inspect aircraft when they have been flown a lot, but have NOT been washed for “awhile”. Loose fasteners, cracked spot-welds, fretting, fluid leaks, etc… will be VERY obvious due to smudging and streaking [“smoking”]. Unwashed airframes will “tell-all-sins”: while washed airframes remove the “tell-tale traces of problems”, making inspections much less accurate and reliable!
Regards, Wil Taylor