So says me:
Spike gets the "clarity of explanation" award here. Dan's approach seems to me that it makes the most sense from a purely logical, rational standpoint, kind of a good compromise of approaches. And, brings up a good point about clecos not holding things in perfect alignment.
The temperature thing is interesting; never heard about that before. I know metal changes size with temperature, but I'm skeptical that it would change enough to notice. Worth reading more about it, though.
I posed the question to Van's tech support:
"I'm ready to skin the HS. If I understand correctly, the common wisdom is to work from center to ends, to avoid "oilcanning" if the skin should stretch a little as you go along. That makes perfect sense to me.
"But - this is where I'm confused - it seems to me that *if* the skin stretches, the holes at the end of the row will no longer be lined up. So it seems that a more random hole riveting order would keep all the matched holes lined up.
"Both of these philosophies make sense to me, but they're obviously contradictory. Can you help with this?"
And, I got this reply:
"It really doesn't matter much -- the sequence is much more about
progressive access with your hand(s). You won't see the skin
"stretch" in metal this thick and pieces this small."
So it's time to buck rivets.
