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#1
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Check this out:
"Paul Sterling of Sterling Aviation Technologies, Inc. has FAA approval for his Wing Life Extension STC. You can now get a minimum of 7650 additional hours past the 11k hour limit" Found this on this site: http://www.pipertomahawk.com (Yes i am looking into Tomahawks ... I am aware of the reputation they have). My question is, from this text it looks like planes... "expire". Once the airframe is past a certain number of hours, that's it. They are toast. You have kits to prolong their life (for the Tomahawk at least, as I have seen) but ... what happens after the life goes past that threshold? Do you "chuck the plane" in the trash? Do you replace the wings? I can't even imagine how much that would cost. I can't believe this... I was under the delusion that planes would last forever... for some reason I find this ... "sad". -- Marco Rispoli - NJ, USA / PP-ASEL My On-line pilot community - http://www.thepilotlounge.com |
#2
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![]() "Marco Rispoli" wrote in message .net... Check this out: "Paul Sterling of Sterling Aviation Technologies, Inc. has FAA approval for his Wing Life Extension STC. You can now get a minimum of 7650 additional hours past the 11k hour limit" Found this on this site: http://www.pipertomahawk.com (Yes i am looking into Tomahawks ... I am aware of the reputation they have). My question is, from this text it looks like planes... "expire". Once the airframe is past a certain number of hours, that's it. They are toast. You have kits to prolong their life (for the Tomahawk at least, as I have seen) but ... what happens after the life goes past that threshold? Do you "chuck the plane" in the trash? Do you replace the wings? I can't even imagine how much that would cost. I can't believe this... I was under the delusion that planes would last forever... for some reason I find this ... "sad". -- Marco Rispoli - NJ, USA / PP-ASEL My On-line pilot community - http://www.thepilotlounge.com Some airplanes (and components) are life limited, others are not. Depends on what rules were in place when the aircraft received its original certification. For instance, a Tomahawk is life limited, but a C-152 (or 150 isn't). The Cessnas were certified before the FAR's were updated in the early-mid '70's, and therefore don't have a life limit. Beyond original certification, some AD's also mandate the retirement of some or all of the airframe at a specified limit. Once the airframe is used up, it is parted out, with the usable parts sold as replacements. For instance, my understanding is that the wing spar is the life limited item on a Tomahawk. IF that is true, the fuse, empennage, flaps, ailerons, etc. would be usable after the wing is scrapped. KB |
#3
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"Kyle Boatright" wrote in message
... "Marco Rispoli" wrote in message .net... Check this out: "Paul Sterling of Sterling Aviation Technologies, Inc. has FAA approval for his Wing Life Extension STC. You can now get a minimum of 7650 additional hours past the 11k hour limit" Found this on this site: http://www.pipertomahawk.com (Yes i am looking into Tomahawks ... I am aware of the reputation they have). My question is, from this text it looks like planes... "expire". Once the airframe is past a certain number of hours, that's it. They are toast. You have kits to prolong their life (for the Tomahawk at least, as I have seen) but ... what happens after the life goes past that threshold? Do you "chuck the plane" in the trash? Do you replace the wings? I can't even imagine how much that would cost. I can't believe this... I was under the delusion that planes would last forever... for some reason I find this ... "sad". -- Marco Rispoli - NJ, USA / PP-ASEL My On-line pilot community - http://www.thepilotlounge.com Some airplanes (and components) are life limited, others are not. Depends on what rules were in place when the aircraft received its original certification. For instance, a Tomahawk is life limited, but a C-152 (or 150 isn't). The Cessnas were certified before the FAR's were updated in the early-mid '70's, and therefore don't have a life limit. Beyond original certification, some AD's also mandate the retirement of some or all of the airframe at a specified limit. Once the airframe is used up, it is parted out, with the usable parts sold as replacements. For instance, my understanding is that the wing spar is the life limited item on a Tomahawk. IF that is true, the fuse, empennage, flaps, ailerons, etc. would be usable after the wing is scrapped. KB IIRC the Tomahawk wing retirement was the result of an AD, not a type certificate limit like the Cirrus. I'm finding most Tomahawks are in the 7-8000 hr range and that the majority aren't used for training anymore. So high average private use of 250 hrs/yr would give them another 12 years minimum before the STC was necessary. Then with the STC you could squeeze another 30 years out of them. By then I don't think you'll see too many 70 year old Tomahawks around. |
#4
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Some planes have a limited airframe life. Most do not, but notable
exceptions include the Tomahawk and the Cirrus. Even so, all airplanes have parts that have to be inspected, overhauled, and replaced occasionally. An airplane with a limited airframe life will probably be scrapped at the end of that time. |
#5
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"Marco Rispoli" wrote
(Yes i am looking into Tomahawks ... I am aware of the reputation they have). There's nothing wrong with Tomahawks. Even their most ardent detractors only claim that they have a problem when spun (my experience with spinning them, as well as FAA tests, indicate these problems are imaginary) and in any case, lots of airpcraft can't be spun safely, which doesn't make them bad airpcraft. I've never owned an aircraft that could be spun safely. My question is, from this text it looks like planes... "expire". Once the airframe is past a certain number of hours, that's it. They are toast. That depends on the airplane. Airplanes certified under the old CAR-3 regulations were not required to show/estimate a service life for most airframe components. Everything was on-condition. Because of grandfathering, lots of airplanes are still being built to those old regulations with only minor changes. That includes all the new Cessna singles and most Pipers, Beeches, and Mooneys, for example. This made a certain amount of sense back in the tube-and-fabric days. Steel doesn't have a practical fatigue life. As long as you don't overstrees it and it doesn't rust, it will pretty much last forever. Fabric was always an on-condition item. Wood has its own special problems - it seems to last forever when taken care of, but glues give - and are hard to inspect. Airplanes that were clean-sheet designs under FAR 23 usually have airframe component limitations. Same for the JAR certified stuff. You need to realize that aluminum airplanes don't last forever anyway. Aluminum has a fatigue life. That's not a big deal for most of the airplane, since most of the skin is sized more for handling requirements than structural integrity, but that's not the case with spars. You should not expect Aluminum spars to last forever. On the other hand, 11,000 hours for the Tommy was overly conservative and of course now that many of them are reaching that number of hours, an STC to increase that is available. That's how it generally goes with life-limited components - if the initial estimate is overly conservative and time starts running out with most of them in good shape, someone comes along and gets an STC to extend the component life. A 10,000 hour Aluminum GA airframe is OLD. It may still be OK, but most of them are not. Even if the Aluminum itself is still OK (it is often showing signs of corrosion, cracks, and many working rivets) you still have the issues of old and many-times-flexed wiring, pulleys, cables, clamps, and all the other stuff. Can all these things be repaired/replaced? Sure, but it takes time and money. A 10,000 hour airframe is rarely a bargain. You have kits to prolong their life (for the Tomahawk at least, as I have seen) but ... what happens after the life goes past that threshold? If it's still in good shape, there will be another kit. Michael |
#6
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You should look into a Beechcraft 77 Skipper.. Much better than a
Traumahawk.. I have one that maybe forsale soon (if my wife lets my buy a Cirrus) and its got to be one of the very best Skipper's out there.. Dennis N3868J MyAirplane.com "Marco Rispoli" wrote in message .net... Check this out: "Paul Sterling of Sterling Aviation Technologies, Inc. has FAA approval for his Wing Life Extension STC. You can now get a minimum of 7650 additional hours past the 11k hour limit" Found this on this site: http://www.pipertomahawk.com (Yes i am looking into Tomahawks ... I am aware of the reputation they have). My question is, from this text it looks like planes... "expire". Once the airframe is past a certain number of hours, that's it. They are toast. You have kits to prolong their life (for the Tomahawk at least, as I have seen) but ... what happens after the life goes past that threshold? Do you "chuck the plane" in the trash? Do you replace the wings? I can't even imagine how much that would cost. I can't believe this... I was under the delusion that planes would last forever... for some reason I find this ... "sad". -- Marco Rispoli - NJ, USA / PP-ASEL My On-line pilot community - http://www.thepilotlounge.com |
#7
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You should look into a Beechcraft 77 Skipper.. Much better than a
Traumahawk.. I have one that maybe forsale soon (if my wife lets my buy a Cirrus) and its got to be one of the very best Skipper's out there.. We saw two of them parked side-by-side at SNF in Florida -- a truly rare sight. I don't think I'd seen five Skippers in my life up till then. What's the story with that bird? Why are they so nearly identical to the Tomahawk? Heck, they look as if they could have been built on the same production line! -- Jay Honeck Iowa City, IA Pathfinder N56993 www.AlexisParkInn.com "Your Aviation Destination" |
#8
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The flying club where I learned to fly had 3 of them (plus a sundowner and a
sierra), which is roughly 1% of all of them built. (There were three hundred some-odd of them built). The Skipper is a fun airplane to fly, but not a very good travelling machine (too slow, and not much useful load). You can tell them apart from a traumahawk by looking at the top of the tail. The tomahawk has a couple inches of the vertical fin above the stabilizer. The Skipper does not. Jay Honeck wrote: You should look into a Beechcraft 77 Skipper.. Much better than a Traumahawk.. I have one that maybe forsale soon (if my wife lets my buy a Cirrus) and its got to be one of the very best Skipper's out there.. We saw two of them parked side-by-side at SNF in Florida -- a truly rare sight. I don't think I'd seen five Skippers in my life up till then. What's the story with that bird? Why are they so nearly identical to the Tomahawk? Heck, they look as if they could have been built on the same production line! -- Jay Honeck Iowa City, IA Pathfinder N56993 www.AlexisParkInn.com "Your Aviation Destination" -- --Ray Andraka, P.E. President, the Andraka Consulting Group, Inc. 401/884-7930 Fax 401/884-7950 http://www.andraka.com "They that give up essential liberty to obtain a little temporary safety deserve neither liberty nor safety." -Benjamin Franklin, 1759 |
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