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#1
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This past Monday, a couple of my friends took off in a Bonanza with a
3-blade McCauley prop installed. At about 1000 feet, on power reduction, one of the blades came unhooked from its pitch change mechanism and went into "free pitch" mode. It apparently made a lot of racket and bad vibrations right away; they were able to make a 180 and land downwind safely. They even had a hard time taxiing, but all are safe. Both McCauley and the FAA are really interested in this one -- to make sure that proper overhaul procedures were followed and to ascertain whether or not bogus parts were used. The insurance company is paying for the engine teardown/rebuild, as there is a possibility that the front bearing was damaged, due to asymmetric thrust. The fortunate thing is that it happened at 1000 feet, after takeoff from a 4800 ft runway, lightly loaded. Watch this space for possible AD and other stuff hitting the fan. |
#2
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On Fri, 14 May 2004 03:01:09 GMT, Orval Fairbairn
wrote: This past Monday, a couple of my friends took off in a Bonanza with a 3-blade McCauley prop installed. At about 1000 feet, on power reduction, one of the blades came unhooked from its pitch change mechanism and went into "free pitch" mode. It apparently made a lot of racket and bad vibrations right away; they were able to make a 180 and land downwind safely. They even had a hard time taxiing, but all are safe. Both McCauley and the FAA are really interested in this one -- to make sure that proper overhaul procedures were followed and to ascertain whether or not bogus parts were used. The insurance company is paying for the engine teardown/rebuild, as there is a possibility that the front bearing was damaged, due to asymmetric thrust. The fortunate thing is that it happened at 1000 feet, after takeoff from a 4800 ft runway, lightly loaded. Watch this space for possible AD and other stuff hitting the fan. Was it a metal prop, or one of those new composite ones? z |
#3
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This past Monday, a couple of my friends took off in a Bonanza with a
3-blade McCauley prop installed. At about 1000 feet, on power reduction, one of the blades came unhooked from its pitch change mechanism and went into "free pitch" mode. Wow -- I can't imagine how a blade could come detached. Those are some pretty beefy mechanisms. Glad they're all safe. -- Jay Honeck Iowa City, IA Pathfinder N56993 www.AlexisParkInn.com "Your Aviation Destination" |
#4
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In article haapc.2474$qA.269328@attbi_s51,
"Jay Honeck" wrote: This past Monday, a couple of my friends took off in a Bonanza with a 3-blade McCauley prop installed. At about 1000 feet, on power reduction, one of the blades came unhooked from its pitch change mechanism and went into "free pitch" mode. Wow -- I can't imagine how a blade could come detached. Those are some pretty beefy mechanisms. Glad they're all safe. I saw the prop in a friend's hangar -- you could rotate one blade freely about its longitudinal axis, while the other two were normal. |
#5
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In article ,
zatatime wrote: On Fri, 14 May 2004 03:01:09 GMT, Orval Fairbairn wrote: This past Monday, a couple of my friends took off in a Bonanza with a 3-blade McCauley prop installed. At about 1000 feet, on power reduction, one of the blades came unhooked from its pitch change mechanism and went into "free pitch" mode. It apparently made a lot of racket and bad vibrations right away; they were able to make a 180 and land downwind safely. They even had a hard time taxiing, but all are safe. Both McCauley and the FAA are really interested in this one -- to make sure that proper overhaul procedures were followed and to ascertain whether or not bogus parts were used. The insurance company is paying for the engine teardown/rebuild, as there is a possibility that the front bearing was damaged, due to asymmetric thrust. The fortunate thing is that it happened at 1000 feet, after takeoff from a 4800 ft runway, lightly loaded. Watch this space for possible AD and other stuff hitting the fan. Was it a metal prop, or one of those new composite ones? z Metal -- you could rotate one blade freelt about its longitudinal axis. I was told that there is a Mickey Mouse setup within the hub that locks the blades together. I also understand that teardown is Monday, under FAA supervision. |
#6
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What I find hard to believe, is that the insurance co. is willing to pay for
the tear-down. Don't they only normally pay for incidental damage - i.e., a tear-down after a prop-strike? "Orval Fairbairn" wrote in message news ![]() This past Monday, a couple of my friends took off in a Bonanza with a 3-blade McCauley prop installed. At about 1000 feet, on power reduction, one of the blades came unhooked from its pitch change mechanism and went into "free pitch" mode. It apparently made a lot of racket and bad vibrations right away; they were able to make a 180 and land downwind safely. They even had a hard time taxiing, but all are safe. Both McCauley and the FAA are really interested in this one -- to make sure that proper overhaul procedures were followed and to ascertain whether or not bogus parts were used. The insurance company is paying for the engine teardown/rebuild, as there is a possibility that the front bearing was damaged, due to asymmetric thrust. The fortunate thing is that it happened at 1000 feet, after takeoff from a 4800 ft runway, lightly loaded. Watch this space for possible AD and other stuff hitting the fan. |
#7
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On Sat, 15 May 2004 01:47:29 GMT, "Tom Jackson"
wrote: What I find hard to believe, is that the insurance co. is willing to pay for the tear-down. Don't they only normally pay for incidental damage - i.e., a tear-down after a prop-strike? In the cases that I have been exposed to, the insurance company will pay for a sudden-stoppage inspection "by-the-book", i.e. they will pay the mandatory replacement parts and labor to perform the manufacturer's required inspection. They will also typically pay to repair internal damage that has directly resulted from the incident. But any other issues discovered during the inspection (parts worn beyond limits from normal usage) are on the owner's dime. I would expect it would be the same in this case. TC |
#8
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On Fri, 14 May 2004 21:29:38 GMT, Orval Fairbairn
wrote: In article , zatatime wrote: On Fri, 14 May 2004 03:01:09 GMT, Orval Fairbairn wrote: This past Monday, a couple of my friends took off in a Bonanza with a 3-blade McCauley prop installed. At about 1000 feet, on power reduction, one of the blades came unhooked from its pitch change mechanism and went into "free pitch" mode. It apparently made a lot of racket and bad vibrations right away; they were able to make a 180 and land downwind safely. They even had a hard time taxiing, but all are safe. Both McCauley and the FAA are really interested in this one -- to make sure that proper overhaul procedures were followed and to ascertain whether or not bogus parts were used. The insurance company is paying for the engine teardown/rebuild, as there is a possibility that the front bearing was damaged, due to asymmetric thrust. The fortunate thing is that it happened at 1000 feet, after takeoff from a 4800 ft runway, lightly loaded. Watch this space for possible AD and other stuff hitting the fan. Was it a metal prop, or one of those new composite ones? z Metal -- you could rotate one blade freelt about its longitudinal axis. I was told that there is a Mickey Mouse setup within the hub that locks the blades together. I also understand that teardown is Monday, under FAA supervision. Thanks. I know most props aren't overbuilt. I'm very curious to see what takes place over time with the new prop blades that are being made. Hope they find the root cause, and that it doesn't warrant an AD. z |
#9
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In article ,
zatatime wrote: On Fri, 14 May 2004 21:29:38 GMT, Orval Fairbairn wrote: In article , zatatime wrote: On Fri, 14 May 2004 03:01:09 GMT, Orval Fairbairn wrote: This past Monday, a couple of my friends took off in a Bonanza with a 3-blade McCauley prop installed. At about 1000 feet, on power reduction, one of the blades came unhooked from its pitch change mechanism and went into "free pitch" mode. It apparently made a lot of racket and bad vibrations right away; they were able to make a 180 and land downwind safely. They even had a hard time taxiing, but all are safe. Both McCauley and the FAA are really interested in this one -- to make sure that proper overhaul procedures were followed and to ascertain whether or not bogus parts were used. The insurance company is paying for the engine teardown/rebuild, as there is a possibility that the front bearing was damaged, due to asymmetric thrust. The fortunate thing is that it happened at 1000 feet, after takeoff from a 4800 ft runway, lightly loaded. Watch this space for possible AD and other stuff hitting the fan. Was it a metal prop, or one of those new composite ones? z Metal -- you could rotate one blade freelt about its longitudinal axis. I was told that there is a Mickey Mouse setup within the hub that locks the blades together. I also understand that teardown is Monday, under FAA supervision. Thanks. I know most props aren't overbuilt. I'm very curious to see what takes place over time with the new prop blades that are being made. Hope they find the root cause, and that it doesn't warrant an AD. z Current thinking is that the prop shop that did the O/H did not follow McCauley procedures -- we will find out more on Monday, when they tear down the prop. BTW, they could not even taxi the plane -- it had too much vibration and not enough net thrust. |
#10
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If the insurance company finds that the prop was improperly overhauled, they
might sue the shop that did it to get their money back. "Tom Jackson" wrote in message news:REepc.94896$Ik.7314393@attbi_s53... What I find hard to believe, is that the insurance co. is willing to pay for the tear-down. Don't they only normally pay for incidental damage - i.e., a tear-down after a prop-strike? |
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