View Single Post
  #2  
Old April 1st 06, 02:20 PM posted to rec.aviation.owning
external usenet poster
 
Posts: n/a
Default Big bad ugly first annual

Welcome to airplane ownership. First of all, don't panic and do
something "right now". Take a step back.

An odd part of airplane ownership is that one mechanic's "airworthy" can
be another mechanic's "death trap". Those rivets may be entirely proper
for that application. They may have been installed by the factory. There
are several types of "pop" rivets for airplane applications that ARE
structural. Is the work signed off anywhere in the logbooks?

When receiving a major dollar report of imminent doom from anyone who
repairs mechanical things, I usually get a second opinion. Especially if
I am told that "you are lucky you made it here". In addition, who says
you are "grounded"? Hopefully that is not a word that came from this
mechanic. No mechanic has that authority. Now, if s/he wants to call the
local FAA folks in to take a look, they can do that. I would bet money
they will not. Other wrenches have weighed in on this forum and they
generally agree that mechanics CAN refuse to sign off the bird as
airworthy, but that is all.

You are in a classic "no leverage" situation and you should consider
getting out of it. If the work was signed off under the previous owner's
stewardship, give them a call and get the mechanic's telephone number.
Tell the old mechanic what your new wrench is telling you and ask them
what they think about the situation.

In general, I advise healthy suspicion. If the work does not appear in
the logbooks or you cannot contact the person who did it, have the plane
buttoned up and take it somewhere else locally. If the mechanic jumps up
and down about how you will be instantly killed if you attempt to fly
the plane OR you cannot bring yourself to do it, then you might try
something else. Tell the wrench that you MUST have a second (or third)
opinion by someone you are bringing in. S/he should not object because
they have already made the case that an unmistakable and dangerous
condition exists. By their own warning of doom, anyone with an A&P
license should spot this immediately and agree. Get a mechanic with
experience in that airplane type, even if you have to pay them to fly
in. Given the potential expense, it may be worth it.

If they won't allow anyone else to look at it, I would then INSIST they
button it up immediately and put it outside. If they won't do that, call
the police.

Only AFTER you have established that an airplane was signed off as
airworthy and it was not (in the opinion of at least 2 independent
sources) should you consider pursuing the person who signed off the
work. Until then, use whoever signed it off as a resource.

Good Luck,
Mike



ncoastwmn wrote:
I'm not sleeping after getting the report grounding my Luscombe 8A
after its first annual as my plane. All the advise about a pre-buy
inspection is true! I thought my plane was too to do that at a long
distance. (My plane came from Georgia, I'm in California). The outboard
five feet of the wings and the tailwheel were assembled with
non-structural pop rivets. I'm lucky the ferry pilot made it here. I
expected some "old plane" problems, not thousands of dollars in
substandard repairs. I have contacted the previous owner and am hoping
to work something out. Has anyone experienced something like this? How
did you deal with this?

Linda
N71467