Lasers and Levels. The adjustment of the wings is described in the manual using a bubble level. How primitive. Time to move on to digital levels and lasers.
Once the wings were set in place with the temporary ‘bullets’ exactly per the manual, measurements of the wing angles (using the wooden stick tool), washout, and dihedral are obtained.
Wing angle. We checked it exactly per the manual using the wooden stick. But then we did it again simply using a digital level, facing forward on one side and aft on the other to assure the measurements were for the same relative angle, left to right. (This technique avoids any error in properly zeroing the digital level). This revealed measurements within less than .2 degrees, left to right.
Dihedral. Per the manual a string is run from left to right and the height measured at the inboard spars. String sags. Laser beams don’t. A laser placed at the end of the right wing was aimed at the end of the left wing. The beam was interrupted with a ruler over the inboard spar to take the measurement. Note that one must compensate for the laser beam originating some distance above the wing tip, depending upon the design of the laser being used.
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Final check. Here is the fun one. The laser level was placed between ribs adjacent to the landing light on the bottom of the right wing, as if measuring the wing angle, and aimed at the strut on the opposite side, a distance of about 18 feet. The point where the laser landed on the strut was marked with a piece of tape. This was repeated on the opposite wing. The point where the laser landed was within a fraction of an inch of 13” to the top of the strut on both sides. This confirmed that the wing angles were accurately adjusted and was more reassuring than a measurement with a two-foot bubble level.
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No adjustments were needed. The reflects well on the precision with which Cub Crafters manufacturers the parts that go into the kit. Of course the real test will come when this Cub flies.