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Roger,
I think we agree that rivets need a hole "to be snug, clean, and burr 
free".  Snug in my shop is in the sequence of tolerances of fits - 
(examples for a 3/16 or #10 diameter oversize of the hole, and how it is 
made, with pro grade tooling) 
interference (dowel pins not to be removed), minus 0.0005 to 0.0015 
clearance (undersize drill and reamer)
line (+/- zero tolerance, pins can be pressed out, might need loctite, 
undersize drill, same size or slightly under reamer)
snug/tight (hand fit but tight)  +0.002/0.003 (oversize reamer, pilot 
point drill or step or core drill secondary operation)
close (easy fit) +0.006 (larger drill, stub length split point or pilot 
point drill) 
free (allowance for position errors) +0.012 (even larger drill)
Snug to me also means a round (low TIR) hole with square entry/exit.  
With a top grade 2 flute chisel point drill bit in a hand drill the 
holes I've done/seen in 0.058 wall tubing will be somewhat triangular, 
and the inside burr significant.  The drill flutes don't engage the 
material before the drill breaks through. Fish tail or DeWalt pilot 
point (formerly Black&Decker Bullet) drills are far superior for thin 
material drilling but are hard to find in other than 64th sizes.  These 
drills produce pretty close to snug/tight fits in thin materials. 
I don't build aircraft parts but do have a collection of step and double 
margin drills used for aircraft rivet hole drilling.  These are usually 
not in the average ham's tool box.  Blind hole inside deburring tools 
are made, but fortunately for most antennas parts access to the interior 
burr is not too hard and a half round file cleans them up. 
OTOH, enough 4/5/6(?) rivets you suggest may hold up in close/free or 
worse fit holes.  I don't know how the antennas you rebuilt were drilled 
for rivets, the F12 EF180C (85' tip to tip) I rebuilt had missing/loose 
rivets and worn holes (2 or 3 rivets per joint). 
Grant KZ1W
On 8/9/2015 0:59 AM, Roger (K8RI) on TT wrote:
 Having built aircraft, or parts of them with lots of "blind rivets", I 
feel safe is using standard "blind rivets".  The hole needs to be 
snug, clean, and burr free.  I would prefer 4 rivets per joint in sets 
of 3 at 120 degrees with the second set of 2 off set from the first 
set by 60 degrees.  I'd use good quality, blind rivets, not 
necessarily aircraft "Cherry rivets"  But the Cherry rivets for 
homebuilts  are not all that expensive.
Just make sure the tubing is clean, inside and out.  I've never had 
them come loose.
I purchased a used Force 12 C19XR and WARC7.  After they had been up 
years, the joints were still good.  The rivets were drilled out to 
transport the antennas.  Putting them back together was a quick 
cleaning with fine scotchgard pads, a thin coat of Al noalox and pop 
rivet back together. 
73
Roger (K8RI)
On 8/9/2015 12:57 AM, Grant Saviers wrote:
 I'll offer a contrarian view - I don't use hose clamps or rivets. One 
exception is a pair of hose clamps when the tip of the element is 
intended to be adjusted e.g. cw to ssb.  Usually a 1/2" to 3/8" tube 
joint.
Riveted antennas I have acquired and rebuilt had missing and loose 
rivets.  I drilled the remaining ones out and used 2 bolts/machine 
screws per joint.  Structurally, pop rivets squeeze a joint together, 
they don't fill the holes with rivet material.  Bridge rivets (hot 
forged) and Boeing rivets do fill the hole and prevent motion 
(airplane rivets are very precise fasteners, essentially each hole is 
reamed to very tight tolerances and then the rivet is cold forged 
closed).  A pop rivet allows the tubes to move which eventually 
loosens the rivet or shears it off and it falls out.  I don't think a 
pop rivet can achieve the force needed for a "slip critical" joint - 
https://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Slip-critical_joint 
Hose clamps are for hose, not aluminum and the thread strength is 
poor (why there is this thread!).  There is no secondary resistance 
to loosening - no lockwasher, nylock, etc. 
I subscribe to the Dave Leeson ("Physical Design of Yagi Antennas") 
bolt the elements together philosophy, particularly two cross bolts 
since the bolts tighten against each other as the tubing goes a bit 
oval from the force.  Nylocks or K-L nuts help keep them from 
loosening but cross bolted, they do get tight enough to stay tight. I 
have yet to see one loosen when properly tightened and then 
re-tightened when the connection stress relaxes over a few days. 
Cross bolts also restrain the elements in two planes, just as a pair 
of orthogonal set screws are best for stuff attached to shafts.  For 
my 2- 3" center sections I use 5/16-18 and for small 1/2 to 3/8 
diameter joints 6-32 works fine, stepping down as needed as element 
diameters decrease - 1/4-20. 10-32. 8-32. 
I use hex head bolts and then socket head (allen) for smaller sizes 
which are preferable to phillips, although one pro builder who built 
some of my antennas managed to find hex head #10 and #8 machine 
screws, but those are pretty rare.  With Penetrox on the threads of 
SS fasteners and on the overlapped tube sections, 
disassembly/reassembly with threaded fasteners is simple.  Just did 
that for seven large yagis that had been up 7 years.  Not a single 
fastener was loose or missing. 
Grant KZ1W
On 8/8/2015 20:19 PM, john@kk9a.com wrote:
 Hose clamps come in different widths, materials and styles. I am not 
sure
what MFJ/ Cushcraft uses or what failed for K6UJ, but on my homebrew
antennas I use worm drive hose clamps with a 9/16" wide band and a 300
series stainless steel screw.  For 1 1/4 or larger tubing I use a 
bolt style 
hose clamp.
John KK9A
To:    "<towertalk@contesting.com>" <towertalk@contesting.com>
Subject:    Re: [TowerTalk] Shorty Forty Hose Clamp thread
From:    Robert Harmon <k6uj@pacbell.net>
Date:    Fri, 7 Aug 2015 22:02:00 -0700
Doug,
I no longer use hose clamps after having them strip as you had 
happen or the 
connection
loosening after flexing back and forth in the wind (I am also in the 
Pacific 
NW)
Now I only use rivets.  I have had a number of Force 12 antennas and no
problem
at all with the connections.  Their riveted conns sold me. The HF 
beams I 
have
fabbed have riveted elements
and no problems.  I wipe on Penetrox when assembling and later when 
taking 
apart
the tubing is like new.  Plus to change element lengths it is super 
easy to 
drill
out the center of the rivets, they pop right out.  Now I can sleep easy
while
the winds blow,  hihi.
73,
Bob
K6UJ
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