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#1
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I'm just wondering if anybody is currently logging hours towards the A&P
Cert. The question of how many hours are required to meet the 18 month A or P experience, or the 30 months experience for the combined A&P, has been asked before. But here in the real world, how are you approaching the process? Thanks! Jim |
#2
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Jim Burns wrote:
I'm just wondering if anybody is currently logging hours towards the A&P Cert. I am. The question of how many hours are required to meet the 18 month A or P experience, or the 30 months experience for the combined A&P, has been asked before. But here in the real world, how are you approaching the process? One wrench turning at a time. -jav |
#3
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Hey Jav,
It was your post and Jim's reply that got me thinking about this. I have plenty of opportunities to work on our own airplane under the supervision and sign offs of several A&Ps, as well as help plenty of hanger neighbors. I'm curious how many people may be doing the same on a part time basis. Thanks and keep up the good work! Jim "Javier" wrote in message ... Jim Burns wrote: I'm just wondering if anybody is currently logging hours towards the A&P Cert. I am. The question of how many hours are required to meet the 18 month A or P experience, or the 30 months experience for the combined A&P, has been asked before. But here in the real world, how are you approaching the process? One wrench turning at a time. -jav |
#4
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I've always consider an A&P out of my reach because
of the experience requirements, but maybe you guys have a point here. I should figure out how to log the work I do and maybe one day I will have accumulated enough experience to do the trick. A local fireman started working as a occasional helper to an A&P on his days of, added to that the time he's spend working on his own airplanes, (including overhauling a couple of engines), studied for and took the knowledge exams and is now getting ready for the practical exam(s). I have a friend who is a professional auto mechanic. He is very interested in getting his A&P. He just finished a 3 or 4 year RV-7 project but unfortunately none of that experience counts. He I have have been talking about buying a core engine and overhauling it under the watchful eye of a local A&P to gain some experience, and then installing it on my Aztec, Then overhaul the removed engine, swap once again, and overhaul the remaining engine. I get two overhauled engines without having the airplane grounded during the process and a third for a spare or for sale. Anybody here have a run-out IO-540C4B5 for sale? Ronnie "Jim Burns" wrote in message ... Hey Jav, It was your post and Jim's reply that got me thinking about this. I have plenty of opportunities to work on our own airplane under the supervision and sign offs of several A&Ps, as well as help plenty of hanger neighbors. I'm curious how many people may be doing the same on a part time basis. Thanks and keep up the good work! Jim "Javier" wrote in message ... Jim Burns wrote: I'm just wondering if anybody is currently logging hours towards the A&P Cert. I am. The question of how many hours are required to meet the 18 month A or P experience, or the 30 months experience for the combined A&P, has been asked before. But here in the real world, how are you approaching the process? One wrench turning at a time. -jav |
#5
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"Ronnie" wrote in message
m... He I have have been talking about buying a core engine and overhauling it under the watchful eye of a local A&P to gain some experience, and then installing it on my Aztec, Then overhaul the removed engine, swap once again, and overhaul the remaining engine. I get two overhauled engines without having the airplane grounded during the process and a third for a spare or for sale. Anybody here have a run-out IO-540C4B5 for sale? Ronnie I've had that same idea, IF, I could be made comfortable with the core engine. Maybe if you do yours, I'll snag your old engine...we could have a C4B5 rotational pool. A couple months ago, there were two C4B5's on Ebay for sale. There were also a few that sold at Earle Aircrafts Dispersal Auction. We lost a good Aztec parts source with that one. ![]() Jim |
#6
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I bid on one of the 2005 hurricane damaged Aztec that had
engines at 650 and 850 hours. My thinking was swaping the engines out with mine and selling the cores or overhauling mine and swapping them back. Th hangar door collapsed on the airframe and damaged all the flying surfaces and bent the props.. It also knocked out the windshied and I assume there would have been water damage in the cockpit. I think I would have made out on the engines, but buying them unseen was a little scary. It would have also been a lot of work and effort to relocate and store it. But it would be nice to have a personal parts pool to draw from :-) Ronnie "Jim Burns" wrote in message ... "Ronnie" wrote in message m... He I have have been talking about buying a core engine and overhauling it under the watchful eye of a local A&P to gain some experience, and then installing it on my Aztec, Then overhaul the removed engine, swap once again, and overhaul the remaining engine. I get two overhauled engines without having the airplane grounded during the process and a third for a spare or for sale. Anybody here have a run-out IO-540C4B5 for sale? Ronnie I've had that same idea, IF, I could be made comfortable with the core engine. Maybe if you do yours, I'll snag your old engine...we could have a C4B5 rotational pool. A couple months ago, there were two C4B5's on Ebay for sale. There were also a few that sold at Earle Aircrafts Dispersal Auction. We lost a good Aztec parts source with that one. ![]() Jim |
#7
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Not doing so...but have thought about it and should really do so.
Whether or not I'm able to go anywhere with it, who knows? ...but, a good idea and fairly easy to keep track of. -- Jack Allison PP-ASEL-Instrument Airplane Arrow N2104T "When once you have tasted flight, you will forever walk the Earth with your eyes turned skyward, for there you have been, and there you will always long to return" - Leonardo Da Vinci (Remove the obvious from address to reply via e-mail) |
#8
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It isn't the amount of hours of A&Ping thats required, but the calendar
months for each of the ratings. A sweeper in an engine shop who works there for 18 months and spends an hour a week working on an engine has met the prerequesit for the time for the "E" of an A&P. He now needs the experience for the rating. Don't think that 40 hours equals a week for the A&p rating. If you work 3 hours in a week on an engine thats a calendar week. Look at the regulations for the requirement and nothing more. If you have the experience and the correct amount of time and an official who will sign you off, you qualify for the rating, you should be qualified to take the test. Dave Jim Burns wrote: I'm just wondering if anybody is currently logging hours towards the A&P Cert. The question of how many hours are required to meet the 18 month A or P experience, or the 30 months experience for the combined A&P, has been asked before. But here in the real world, how are you approaching the process? Thanks! Jim |
#9
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Speaking as someone who has actually done it this way (gotten the A&P
purely on the basis of part-time non-professional small-GA experience without ever having had a job in aviation maintenance, working exclusively on my planes and what my friends owned) I can tell you a bit about it. The first thing you have to understand is that the hard part of getting the A&P is getting the FAA to allow you to take the test. The tests themselves are a joke. There are three written tests that cover a huge amoung of material, mostly worthless. They are handled the same was as any other FAA test - you buy the study book with all the quetions and answers, you study for a couple of days, you take the test. Lather, rinse, repeat. The practical test is geared so that a kid who just graduated from an 18 month community college program or has spent the last 30 months working in a shop as gofer, sweeper, king of odd jobs, and occasional assistant wrench-turner can pass it. For someone who has actually got 4800 hours working on airplanes, it's a sick joke. I know one guy who spent most of his sweeping out the hangar, after compression-checking one jug and driving a couple of rivets. Once you understand that the primary barrier to entry is convincing an FAA bureaucrat to let you take the test, rather than the test itself, you begin to understand that there CAN'T be a simple, sensible, published set of rules that tells you how. Otherwise, there would be no real barrier to entry at all. With that in mind, I can give you some general guidelines: 1 - Don't believe anything said by someone who hasn't actually done it that way - that includes anyone who worked in aviation maintenance professionally, in the military, etc. It won't help you. 2 - Don't believe anything the FAA tells you either. The last thing the FAA wants is to give an airplane owner who has a professional career outside aviation an A&P ticket. On paper, it's very simple. You need 4800 hours of part time experience, which covers a variety of skills, engines, and accessories. You need a letter from an A&P attesting to this. Then you go to the FSDO, get your signoff, and take your tests. In practice, the fed will do everything possible to deny you that signoff. You have to bring along enough paperwork to scare him into believing that if he won't sign you off, you will have a good chance of suing him and winning, thus damaging his career. Be absolutely polite, but don't back down an inch. Every piece of paper is 100% real. Every minute of claimed experience is 100% real. Any insinuation otherwise is acusing the A&P who signed the letter of lying. So what kind of paper? A mechanic's log is good. Every time you work on your plane, log it. Log every minute. The time spent to open up the hangar, get the tools, clean the plane before and/or after, put the tools away, sweep up - it all counts. Don't worry about being too neat. Greasy fingerprints are fine. As long as the N-numbers, dates, and times are legible, you're good. Aircraft logbook and form 337 copies. If an entry is made into an aircraft logbook and/or form 337 and you did ANY of the work (even if you just fetched tools, brought the mechanic cofee, and listened to him explain what he was doing) then you make a copy for yourself. Remember, it's about quantity, not quality. An hour spent with a can of LPS-2 getting the rust worked out of a throwover yoke is the same as an hour spent internally timing a magneto. Variety counts, though. You won't get your signoff if you have worked on a total of three airplanes in your life. Make sure your A&P gives you chance to work on other airplanes. A compression check may be the same on a Cessna 150 as it is on a Piper Lance, but if you've done compression checks on ten different makes and models, that's ten different makes and models you have worked on. Remember - quantity, not quality. Once you're close to the hour requirements, start searching the FAA sites. You will find a sample letter for your A&P to write. Don't get creative. Stick to the format exactly. The only things that change are names and dates. Pay stubs would be great, but you don't have any. Still, the question of how you were compensated would come up. Did you get free flight instruction? Free maintenance? Remember, the FAA and the IRS don't communicate. Be prepared to answer why you want this. Wanting to work on your own is NOT a good answer. The right answer is you plan to open a shop as your retirement. Again, remember the FAA and IRS don't communicate. Michael |
#10
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Bingo! This is exactly what I was looking for.
Thanks Michael Jim "Michael" wrote in message oups.com... Speaking as someone who has actually done it this way (gotten the A&P purely on the basis of part-time non-professional small-GA experience without ever having had a job in aviation maintenance, working exclusively on my planes and what my friends owned) I can tell you a bit about it. The first thing you have to understand is that the hard part of getting the A&P is getting the FAA to allow you to take the test. The tests themselves are a joke. There are three written tests that cover a huge amoung of material, mostly worthless. They are handled the same was as any other FAA test - you buy the study book with all the quetions and answers, you study for a couple of days, you take the test. Lather, rinse, repeat. The practical test is geared so that a kid who just graduated from an 18 month community college program or has spent the last 30 months working in a shop as gofer, sweeper, king of odd jobs, and occasional assistant wrench-turner can pass it. For someone who has actually got 4800 hours working on airplanes, it's a sick joke. I know one guy who spent most of his sweeping out the hangar, after compression-checking one jug and driving a couple of rivets. Once you understand that the primary barrier to entry is convincing an FAA bureaucrat to let you take the test, rather than the test itself, you begin to understand that there CAN'T be a simple, sensible, published set of rules that tells you how. Otherwise, there would be no real barrier to entry at all. With that in mind, I can give you some general guidelines: 1 - Don't believe anything said by someone who hasn't actually done it that way - that includes anyone who worked in aviation maintenance professionally, in the military, etc. It won't help you. 2 - Don't believe anything the FAA tells you either. The last thing the FAA wants is to give an airplane owner who has a professional career outside aviation an A&P ticket. On paper, it's very simple. You need 4800 hours of part time experience, which covers a variety of skills, engines, and accessories. You need a letter from an A&P attesting to this. Then you go to the FSDO, get your signoff, and take your tests. In practice, the fed will do everything possible to deny you that signoff. You have to bring along enough paperwork to scare him into believing that if he won't sign you off, you will have a good chance of suing him and winning, thus damaging his career. Be absolutely polite, but don't back down an inch. Every piece of paper is 100% real. Every minute of claimed experience is 100% real. Any insinuation otherwise is acusing the A&P who signed the letter of lying. So what kind of paper? A mechanic's log is good. Every time you work on your plane, log it. Log every minute. The time spent to open up the hangar, get the tools, clean the plane before and/or after, put the tools away, sweep up - it all counts. Don't worry about being too neat. Greasy fingerprints are fine. As long as the N-numbers, dates, and times are legible, you're good. Aircraft logbook and form 337 copies. If an entry is made into an aircraft logbook and/or form 337 and you did ANY of the work (even if you just fetched tools, brought the mechanic cofee, and listened to him explain what he was doing) then you make a copy for yourself. Remember, it's about quantity, not quality. An hour spent with a can of LPS-2 getting the rust worked out of a throwover yoke is the same as an hour spent internally timing a magneto. Variety counts, though. You won't get your signoff if you have worked on a total of three airplanes in your life. Make sure your A&P gives you chance to work on other airplanes. A compression check may be the same on a Cessna 150 as it is on a Piper Lance, but if you've done compression checks on ten different makes and models, that's ten different makes and models you have worked on. Remember - quantity, not quality. Once you're close to the hour requirements, start searching the FAA sites. You will find a sample letter for your A&P to write. Don't get creative. Stick to the format exactly. The only things that change are names and dates. Pay stubs would be great, but you don't have any. Still, the question of how you were compensated would come up. Did you get free flight instruction? Free maintenance? Remember, the FAA and the IRS don't communicate. Be prepared to answer why you want this. Wanting to work on your own is NOT a good answer. The right answer is you plan to open a shop as your retirement. Again, remember the FAA and IRS don't communicate. Michael |
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