May 28, 2004 at 11:38 pm
Hi everyone
We were removing the leading edge from one of our Whitley wings last weekend and noticed these marking on the underside. I’ve seen them before on RAF aircraft but never stopped to think what they stand for.
Does anyone know their significance?
Thanks
Elliott
By: Whitley_Project - 29th May 2004 at 20:43
That makes sense chaps – the leading edge still retains some of its electrical bonding! All will be carefully preserved and retained 🙂
By: Eddie - 29th May 2004 at 16:40
Yep – I’d agree with that. I know that Mosquitos have all their structure bonded together with strips of copper (there must be hundreds of feet of the stuff in a Mossie!) to prevent static build up.
By: blueyonder - 29th May 2004 at 16:00
After thinking about it and re-reading the posts here, I think I agree with Slipstreams understanding of what wired throughout actually does…
By: Slipstream - 29th May 2004 at 15:17
I always understood electrical bonding to be for preventing a potential difference build up ( static electricity ) to eliminate the risk of sparks which could ignite fuel vapours.
By: blueyonder - 29th May 2004 at 12:23
I was under the impression that the movable surface where this marking appears is electrically bonded to the airframe to reduce electrostatic EMI (Radio noise). Is this the same thing as “Wired Throughout?
—
Allan
As far as I know, yes!
By: Whitley_Project - 29th May 2004 at 09:37
Thanks Blueyonder
By: blueyonder - 28th May 2004 at 23:40
It stands for
“Wired throughout” 🙂