Four Methods of Flush Riveting
Four Methods of Flush Riveting

Four Methods of Flush Riveting

July 14, 1942 | 10 min

Flush riveting is a way of connecting two pieces of sheet metal together, using rivets whose heads do not protrude above the surface of the metal. In aircraft construction, a flush rivet reduces drag, thus increasing aircraft performance. This World War II-era Walt Disney industrial-training film teaches four methods of flush-riveting aircraft aluminum sheet metal: the Countersink method, the Double Dimple method, the Pre-Dimple method, and the Combination Pre-Dimple and Countersink method. The choice of method to use is based upon the thicknesses of the top and bottom metal sheets.

Genres

Documentary Animation War

Cast

Share on social media

More Like This

Everest
Extreme
Great North
The Greatest Places
Hail Columbia!
Into the Deep
Mountain Gorilla
Ocean Men, Extreme Dive
The Secret of Life on Earth
Stormchasers
Super Speedway
A Chipmunk Christmas
Lost Worlds: Life in the Balance
Surviving Sid
Grand Canyon: The Hidden Secrets
Catch It
Tongue Tied
Bambi Meets Godzilla
Big Ear
Underground Crossing