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OK, Jim has a point, in that I made my opinion known without having
numerical data to back up my opinion. I retract my comments to whatever degree is appropriate based on that alone. My "attitude" in my last post came from two equal directions. First, as Jim and others said, I wasted a tank of gas and felt like someone was being less then forthright with me. But second, when I posted originally, I got flamed for being a cry baby, or a whiner, or a spoiled brat, and NONE of those nasty comments were deserved. Yes, I saw a beater and I was really ****ed off about it, and so I ranted a little. However, what remains is that I found an airplane that I SUSPECTED was either unairworthy or very close to it on several levels. I feel that a less-educated or less-experienced person MIGHT have been taken for a ride, so I figured that (personal irritation aside) it was worth mentioning. If my post made ONE airplane buyer look a little more closely at an airplane he was buying, then I stand by my words in a Nomex tuxedo. Another underlying point I was trying to make was that even though I am willing to rely on my own un-licensed, "eyeball" judgement, I recommended that buyers beware and that it is a good idea to get a real pre-buy inspection if you can. Obviously Jim or any other good IA would know a lot more than I. I truly wish that I had taken the time to (learn which, and then) bring the right drill bits and have the numerical information with me that day, and so I could have posted that this particular airplane was/was not within the limits. My position was that if it was even reasonably average, I would have bought the airplane and then restored or upgraded it over time while I was flying it. I will issue an apology to the seller if it is found that the seat rails were within legal limits, that is, if I were willing to even speak to him. I will issue an apology to the newsgroup(s) for being a cry baby, and I'll offer an apology to Jim Weir if I poked back at him a little too quickly. I'll offer an apology to the manufacturer of the T and Z drill bits as well while I'm at it. The experienced Cessna mechanics I have spoken to assure me that replacing the seat rails is a real pain in the ass, and is far more difficult than others in the newsgroup have assumed. I have not replaced Cessna seat rails, so I can't say from experience. I understand that it is a very painful and awkward task to get at the backside of several of the rivets, and many shops use Cherry rivets or other blind rivets to do it out of necessity. If I misunderstood or was uninformed about an AD on the flap tracks, then I will issue yet another apology. In my personal un-licensed and apparently foolish opinion, you should not be able to wiggle the flaps up and down an inch, hearing the rollers thump back and forth in the tracks. One Cessna-experienced IA told me that you should not be able to put more than one business card thickness between the roller and the track. I am sure that there is some official feeler gauge measurement, but I didn't have that info with me either. I also would have bet that frozen aileron pushrod ball joints are not considered airworthy. I was trained to rotate the ball joints a few degrees each way with your fingers on a pre-flight inspection, to make sure the joints are not frozen. I was NOT of the opinion that you should need a wrench or needle-nose pliers to rotate the ball joints, finger pressure should be enough. I am not aware of any numerical measurement on that. I was trained as a brand new student pilot that the controls should be "free and clear", observed by BOTH moving the control surfaces with finger pressure AND the lack of excess friction at the control yoke. There was no numerical measurement that I recall, just good old common sense and average mechanical aptitude. Silly me, I also ASSUMED that you should NOT be able to move the pilot's side control yoke up and down vertically twice as much as the copilot's side. That 175 MIGHT have been legal to fly, but it was a worn out beater and there were significant maintenance concerns that would have been a major issue either now or at some time in the near future. Period. Somebody should have bought it for five or ten grand, trucked it home, and restored it into a "Classic Era" Oshkosh champion. Adieu, newsgroups, now I remember why I left in the first place. Bill |
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Bela...
You are probably ten times the sheet metal man than I am. I limit my expertise to paperwork, inspection, and avionics (not necessarily in that order). However, if you can do a Cessna seat rail, with real buck-em rivets and not the approved bolts, inside of two hours, then I will bring my airplane to YOU when the next rail needs replacing. I helped the IA that knew what he was doing on the last pass, and the only thing I want to do less next time is put the fuel cells in (and don't get me started on THAT bloody trail). Hey, Berle, stick around. We all take turns getting our ass nailed to the floor {;-) Jim Bela P. Havasreti shared these priceless pearls of wisdom: - -I suppose everything is relative.... I've had the entire floors -drilled off (front & rear) in under an hour. Makes seat track -replacement easy grins and you can also take the opportunity -to clean the inner belly of all that crap that has accumulated there -over the years. - -You need the right bucking bars to get at all the rivets (might have -to make/modify one or two). - -I agree the average owner may not want to tackle this.... (under -the supervision of an A&P/IA, of course). I only wanted to mention -that (at least in my opinion), it ain't that big a deal.... - -snip - -Adieu, newsgroups, now I remember why I left in the first place. - -Bill - -Stick around. Every now & then we get our feathers ruffled -(been there myself). In the grand scheme of things (the meaning -of life, etc.), it's no big deal.... - -Bela P. Havasreti Jim Weir (A&P/IA, CFI, & other good alphabet soup) VP Eng RST Pres. Cyberchapter EAA Tech. Counselor http://www.rst-engr.com |
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On Wed, 07 Jul 2004 17:23:13 -0700, Jim Weir wrote:
How do I respond to that without sounding like a complete ass? (don't answer that question!). I guess if I can hang my hat on something, it's being a half-way-decent sheet metal man. Just recently, I helped a good buddy do new fuel cells on a '57 C-180. We pulled the wings and drilled off the (inboard) butt-ribs. I am at a loss as to how folks can accomplish this task without pulling the wings.... (i.e, remove the old fuel cells and offer the new fuel cells down into the wing bays through that 10 inch diameter, or whatever it is fuel filler hole in the top of the wings). Not to mention getting all the clips/hangars snapped (that was tough enough with the wings pulled). Anyway, they are far better wrenches, and far more patient then I am.... I guess in simple terms, via my long-term project I've been working on for the last 8+ years, drilling scores of rivets out, removing skin panels and riveting newly fabricated ones back on has become my "briar patch". Bela P. Havasreti Bela... You are probably ten times the sheet metal man than I am. I limit my expertise to paperwork, inspection, and avionics (not necessarily in that order). However, if you can do a Cessna seat rail, with real buck-em rivets and not the approved bolts, inside of two hours, then I will bring my airplane to YOU when the next rail needs replacing. I helped the IA that knew what he was doing on the last pass, and the only thing I want to do less next time is put the fuel cells in (and don't get me started on THAT bloody trail). Hey, Berle, stick around. We all take turns getting our ass nailed to the floor {;-) Jim Bela P. Havasreti shared these priceless pearls of wisdom: - -I suppose everything is relative.... I've had the entire floors -drilled off (front & rear) in under an hour. Makes seat track -replacement easy grins and you can also take the opportunity -to clean the inner belly of all that crap that has accumulated there -over the years. - -You need the right bucking bars to get at all the rivets (might have -to make/modify one or two). - -I agree the average owner may not want to tackle this.... (under -the supervision of an A&P/IA, of course). I only wanted to mention -that (at least in my opinion), it ain't that big a deal.... - -snip - -Adieu, newsgroups, now I remember why I left in the first place. - -Bill - -Stick around. Every now & then we get our feathers ruffled -(been there myself). In the grand scheme of things (the meaning -of life, etc.), it's no big deal.... - -Bela P. Havasreti Jim Weir (A&P/IA, CFI, & other good alphabet soup) VP Eng RST Pres. Cyberchapter EAA Tech. Counselor http://www.rst-engr.com |
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