With the Stabilizer skin match drilled the next thing to do before priming and final riveting is to fit the fiberglass tip to the tip rib.
Having read a few articles on Sonex web sites related to the problems with this task, I expected (and found) that it was not as simple as just slipping the fiberglass tip to the end of the stabilizer and match drilling it.
First, the overall length, particularly the length of the fiberglass that is left hanging past the trailing edge of the stabilizer, should line up with the rudder trailing edge. While this is purely an aesthetic issue, there is at least one post where the builder installed the tip only to find out after mounting the rudder that the fiberglass tip overhung considerably farther than the rudder. It was not a “look” I wanted to copy. The builder ultimately removed and refit the tip by modifying it. His closing comment was that he spent more time fitting the tip than constructing the vertical stabilizer.
There is a dimension on the plans that shows the trailing edge of the tip should extend 12-5/32″ beyond the edge of the vertical stab. Not surprisingly, this is equal to the rudder tip to the center of the hinge. This reference mark was one that I put on the fiberglass tip to avoid it as I tried to fit it.
Below I show that if I did not put the tip rib in place I could install the fiberglass tip and push it far enough forward to obtain the requisite 12-5/32″ overhang.
The initial fitting of the fiberglass tip would slide under the stabilizer skin without the rib in place and actually fit pretty well with regard to the leading edge of the skin fitting tightly with the fiberglass while at the same time having the tip extend the required 12-5/32″. The fiberglass tip was a bit narrower near the leading edge than the tip rib and therefore would not slide under the skin with the rib clecoed in place.

I was ready to either cut the fiberglass tip and reshape it to fit the tip or else consider building a narrower tip rib. I mentioned my dilemma to a friend at work who had a hobby / side business of building high performance rods and had experience with fiberglass fitting. He told of a similar story of getting some ground effect fiberglass that fit on one side of the car but not the other and found that he could simple heat the parts with steam and then quickly mount them on the car while still hot and re-mold them to the proper shape.
This, of course, made perfect sense (I had read the issues with fiberglass airframes and the issue with summer heat). So I used a hot air gun with the rib tip as a form pressing from the inside of the fiberglass tip I heated the outside and with a little care I was able to modify the fiberglass so the rib fit inside it and it fit into place between the skin and the rib.
Below is a shot of the inside of the reformed FG tip after heating with the rib pressed forward into the now wider tip.


Top view of fiberglass without any clecos to bring the skin tight to the fiberglass. A little pressure will easily close the gap indicating that when riveted it will be a snug fit.

The end result was that it was relatively easy to heat the FG tip and mold it to accommodate the shape of the tip rib so that it could be slide between the skin and rib and still maintain the trailing edge overhang. I can see that the normal variation in fiberglass dimensions could require more in-depth modifications but using heat to reshape the leading edge of the FG tip was an excellent tool to keep in mind. While the FG tip needed only 1/8 to 13/16″ of manipulation at the leading edge, this small amount created a very large mounting error at the trailing edge. The photos might not show this issue particularly well but the change was dramatic with regard to fitting the FG tip.








