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Wow, you guys... this takes the cake. I figured that a few of you
might bicker a little about what I said, but I could never have imagined the silly flame war that ensued. I guess I have a few more folks who dislike me than I had initially counted. In my life, I have INDEED been at various times a horse's ass, a buyer of un-airworthy airplanes, and a seller of unairworthy planes. I've been a womanizer, a liar, a spoiled brat, a whining brat, and an angry bitter jackass. I've had money to burn and I've clipped coupons and I've spent money and I've lost money. But one thing that I have NEVER done, is to turn my back on aviation or my fellow pilots and owners. I have NEVER kept silent about something important where my voice (even the voice of a spoiled brat) could have made a difference. Some people can sit back and say that it's all on the buyer, and that the seller has every right to just keep quiet and let the buyer figure out everything for himself, and screw the buyer if he gets taken. That is a very common mentality in certain cultures outside of America and well outside of aviation. For those of you who think that I was wrong, or whining, or crying or whatever when I posted a warning, I have a couple of questions: Do any of you understand that the existence of private aviation in America in 2004 is put at real risk by every private airplane crash that gets reported on the news? In an election year? That YOUR ability to go flying on a nice day could easily be destroyed by one Cessna crashing into a house on the other side of the country from you? Do any of you understand that an average brand new private pilot with 150 hours would have every reason to believe that if he buys an airplane with a current annual inspection signoff he has every reason to think it is safe and airworthy? REGARDLESS OF THE ****ING DOLLAR PRICE HE PAID??? Do any of you know the difference between a quickie 'pencil whip' annual inspection on an airplane that there isn't anything seriously wrong with, and a quickie 'pencil whip' annual on an airplane with significant mechanical safety issues that need to be addressed before the next flight? For the record, there is a reason I said that I am not an IA or A&P...because I am not one. However, I am fairly educated and have been around long enough to know a little more than the average owner. My reason for stating all that originally (and now) is that I admitted that I did not have the measuring equipment or the license to determine the exact state of legal airworthiness on that 175. That being said, I saw several things on a CURSORY inspection that were of serious concern to me, and that convinced me the airplane was less than safe. All of the folks who posted negative comments about me or my post ALSO did not address what I said in any real-world manner. Even though I did not have the measuring tools or the license to use them, I said that I knew damn well that Cessna did not build seat rails with oval shaped holes. NOBODY said anything like "well, I think Bill Berle is a jackass for XYZ reason, but yes, oval shaped seat rail holes have KILLED more than one Cessna owner and that is certainly a big tip-off that the plane might be less than safe." We are in an economic recession, and used airplane prices have fallen in some segments. People get desperate to sell for personal reasons. People have the IRS clawing up their backside round about May or June. Airplanes OFTEN get bought and sold at bargain prices, both projects and showplanes. When an IA mechanic inspector signs off an annual, that means the airplane is presumed airworthy and within safe limits, even if the owner wants to sell the plane for 50% of it's retail value a week later. The IA does NOT have the right to say to the buyer "well, tough ****, you get what you pay for, anyone who thought that $25K would buy you a really airworthy 175 is an idiot...caveat emptor and all that... and my signature doesn't count unless you paid $50K for it anyway". What seems to have been lost in all these intellectual giants' flaming replies is that there was an airplane presented and advertised as being flyable, safe, and in-annual. The airplane was at the very least suspicious because of the results of a very informal cursory inspection. Since I am NOT a licensed IA, I am NOT in a position to numerically quantify the wear limits on seat rails, flap tracks, control yoke play, and aileron circuit friction. However I am well within my rights and ability to call it into question for IA's, FAA inspectors, and other potential fraud victims to talk about. I even told the guy that if the measurements showed it to be within limits I would publish an apology. Nobody wanted to give me credit for that, I guess. Out of a personal dislike for me, my detractors seem to be overlooking the most universally basic service that pilots and aviation people do for each other... they look out for each other and always go over and above what is minimally required, to help prevent an accident. Well, MOST of us go over and above, Jim. I have every legal right to stand by and watch some other pilot take off with a control lock still installed. In my best "caveat emptor" voice, I could tell the NTSB investigators that the pilot got what he deserved, because he didn't follow the checklist and didn't do a proper pre-flight, and that I haven't a care about his widowed wife and kids. And that the pilot can further burn in hell because I don't like him, and worse yet I found his tone of voice a little too 'whining' when he was talking about the preflight in the first place. It appears that THIS is the same kind of logic some of the posters in this thread would apply. None of you who hide behind that type of logic are friends of aviation. My intent was to make people aware of a potentially...POTENTIALLY...unsafe airplane and a DEFINITELY sleazy seller. I had to tone down and soften several things to protect myself from a lawsuit. For the same reason, I had to remind everyone that I am not legally licensed to say whether this airplane was airworthy, which one poster took to mean I didn't know much about airplanes. I know more about airplanes (and I honor our un-written agreement to help each other) than some of the fish in these waters do. I feel that I have done the right thing by calling people's attention to this matter. I will do it again tomorrow or the next day. I am disgusted that it appears some of you wouldn't do it, just because you didn't have to. As for the personal attacks or disparaging comments toward me, I can live with that far better than I could live with myself if I just sat back and said "caveat emptor" and allowed this type of behavior to go un-addressed. And as for Mr. Weir, I have no idea what I have ever done to earn his disrespect. He read my original post, looked past all of the substance and reasoning behind it, and then proclaimed that "all he saw" was a spoiled brat or an amateur IA wannabee, or whatever. My question, Sir, is how could you see anything if your view was blocked by the inner lining of your colon? Bill Berle Los Angeles |
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Berle;
Well said. Your original post was informative but somehow lost by the members of the Weirassembleyofgod. Jim's a great guy and contributes much needed info, but when he's got a burr under his saddle, he makes sure all hear his whinny (sp). On 2 Jul 2004 00:39:03 -0700, (Bill Berle) wrote: Wow, you guys... this takes the cake. I figured that a few of you might bicker a little about what I said, but I could never have imagined the silly flame war that ensued. |
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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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(Bill Berle)
shared these priceless pearls of wisdom: - -I guess I have a few more folks who dislike me than I had initially -counted. In my life, I have INDEED been at various times a horse's -ass, a buyer of un-airworthy airplanes, and a seller of unairworthy -planes. I've been a womanizer, a liar, a spoiled brat, a whining brat, -and an angry bitter jackass. I've had money to burn and I've clipped -coupons and I've spent money and I've lost money. I don't dislike you. Hell, I've never MET you. My comment was that you were beating some ******* up that may or may not have deserved it, but not from any hard data that you posted. You may not have liked what you saw, but nowhere did you say what measured outside of limits or what lie (prevarication, untruth, etc.) you were told by the owner. Did the ad say N/MDH (no/minor damage history)? If so, you were within your rights to flail the owner publicly. Did you ask directly about major damage history and be told that there was none? Again, you can rip the owner a public new asshole for lying. But NOWHERE in your rambling post did you assert any such behavior. And yes, at some point in our checkered careers, most of us have been somewhere in that litany of bad actors that you listed. - -But one thing that I have NEVER done, is to turn my back on aviation -or my fellow pilots and owners. I have NEVER kept silent about -something important where my voice (even the voice of a spoiled brat) -could have made a difference. Some people can sit back and say that -it's all on the buyer, and that the seller has every right to just -keep quiet and let the buyer figure out everything for himself, and -screw the buyer if he gets taken. That is a very common mentality in -certain cultures outside of America and well outside of aviation. The seller has the obligation to point out to you anything that (s)he knows to be unairworthy. The seller has the obligation to answer any questions to the best of their ability. The seller does NOT have the obligation to point out to you every item on the aircraft that may or may not need future maintenance. You **have** heard of a prepurchase inspection, have you not? If you felt the IA/AP that did the recent work might have let some stuff slip, you **do** have a mechanic that you know and trust, do you not ... after owning all of your airplanes you MUST have run across at least one trustworthy wrench. - -For those of you who think that I was wrong, or whining, or crying or -whatever when I posted a warning, I have a couple of questions: - -Do any of you understand that the existence of private aviation in -America in 2004 is put at real risk by every private airplane crash -that gets reported on the news? In an election year? That YOUR ability -to go flying on a nice day could easily be destroyed by one Cessna -crashing into a house on the other side of the country from you? Of course. That's why some of us take a cut in pay to spend a few years in elected office, just to keep what we can in aviation going. - -Do any of you understand that an average brand new private pilot with -150 hours would have every reason to believe that if he buys an -airplane with a current annual inspection signoff he has every reason -to think it is safe and airworthy? REGARDLESS OF THE ****ING DOLLAR -PRICE HE PAID??? If the average brand new private pilot believes this, then his instructor was sadly deficient in conveying 91.3 and 91.7. Why not attack the problem at the root...instructors that don't drill it deep about the responsibility of PIC? - -Do any of you know the difference between a quickie 'pencil whip' -annual inspection on an airplane that there isn't anything seriously -wrong with, and a quickie 'pencil whip' annual on an airplane with -significant mechanical safety issues that need to be addressed before -the next flight? I've never met an IA that pencil-whips annuals. Evidently you have. Perhaps that is why you distrust the lot of us so. - -For the record, there is a reason I said that I am not an IA or -A&P...because I am not one. However, I am fairly educated and have -been around long enough to know a little more than the average owner. -My reason for stating all that originally (and now) is that I -admitted that I did not have the measuring equipment or the license to -determine the exact state of legal airworthiness on that 175. That -being said, I saw several things on a CURSORY inspection that were of -serious concern to me, and that convinced me the airplane was less -than safe. All of the folks who posted negative comments about me or -my post ALSO did not address what I said in any real-world manner. Excuse me? Seems to me I posted the entire list of airframe ADs on a 175 and asked you to find the "flap track AD" that you referred to on that list. If you are referring to the 72-03-03R3 jackscrew AD, the 175 is not listed as applicable. If that isn't real-world, how do you better define it? - -Even though I did not have the measuring tools or the license to use -them, I said that I knew damn well that Cessna did not build seat -rails with oval shaped holes. NOBODY said anything like "well, I think -Bill Berle is a jackass for XYZ reason, but yes, oval shaped seat rail -holes have KILLED more than one Cessna owner and that is certainly a -big tip-off that the plane might be less than safe." So Berle knows better than the Cessna engineers that wrote the seat rail AD? And the FAA folks that approved it, with three revisions, each one more restrictive than the prior version? Most Cessna drivers that are "fairly educated and have been around long enough to know a little more than the average owner" would have spent the buck or so on a T drill and a Z drill. If the T drill doesn't show space around it, the airplane is good to the next annual. If the T drill has an air gap, then it gets inspected every 100 hours until the Z drill shows an air gap and then the rail is replaced. That's the engineering way of doing it. The airplane didn't meet YOUR standards, Berle. That may or may not be the airworthy standards. But YOU don't get to set the standards for airworthiness until you start punching the FAA timecard. - -When an IA mechanic inspector signs off an annual, that means the -airplane is presumed airworthy and within safe limits, even if the -owner wants to sell the plane for 50% of it's retail value a week -later. The IA does NOT have the right to say to the buyer "well, tough -****, you get what you pay for, anyone who thought that $25K would buy -you a really airworthy 175 is an idiot...caveat emptor and all that... -and my signature doesn't count unless you paid $50K for it anyway". The IA has no relationship to the buyer. The IA put his signature (and reputation) on the dotted line for the current owner. If the buyer looks up the IA and asks a question, the IA is perfectly within his rights not to answer. The IA has the right to refuse to reinspect the aircraft for the buyer. Having said all that, if the signator IA was evasive, I'd have every reason to suspect that something was wrong with the deal. At that point, I'd either back away or have my trustworthy wrench give the airplane a **thorough** inspection. - -What seems to have been lost in all these intellectual giants' flaming -replies is that there was an airplane presented and advertised as -being flyable, safe, and in-annual. The airplane was at the very least -suspicious because of the results of a very informal cursory -inspection. Since I am NOT a licensed IA, I am NOT in a position to -numerically quantify the wear limits on seat rails, flap tracks, -control yoke play, and aileron circuit friction. However I am well -within my rights and ability to call it into question for IA's, FAA -inspectors, and other potential fraud victims to talk about. I even -told the guy that if the measurements showed it to be within limits I -would publish an apology. Nobody wanted to give me credit for that, I -guess. You've got it dead wrong, Berle, dead FRIKKIN wrong. You are very much in a position to numerically quantify wear limits wherever you please. You can measure, tap, jiggle, and satisfy yourself that every part on the airplane is within specifications. You can disassemble the engine and measure parts to a tenth of a thousandth if you wish, and you can reassemble that same engine. The only thing you CAN'T do is sign your own work off after you are done. If it was a 175 you were lusting after, did you ask your trustworthy mechanic to give you an AD checksheet printout on the airplane? Most all of us who play the game for real spend a grand or so a year for software that keeps us on the straight and narrow regarding maintenance. Most of us will print out a checklist for a client in the hopes of keeping the client happy. Most of us will also let the client pore over the maintenance manual and copy down pertinent sections and wear limits. My suspicion is that you did neither. In short, Bill, you are very like one of my students who doesn't do the weekly assignments and then tells me what a lousy teacher I am when they fail the midterm. You -- didn't -- do -- your -- homework. So, in the interests of education, here is a quick and dirty first-cut way to do Airworthiness Directive 87-20-03R2 on a private (not for hire) airplane. You might want to cut this out and use it on your next "inspection": A. The AD covers everything from the first 150 to the last 337 that Cessna ever made, and everything in between that uses seat rails. B. The airplane has to have more than a thousand hours total time. C. Look for cracks in the rail. If there is a crack ACROSS a hole, it is permitted so long as there is no other crack within an inch of this crack OR less than 5 cracks of this nature on the rail. If the crack is from hole to hole, replace the rail. If there are cracks in the rest of the rail below the top part of the rail, replace the rail. (You really need the drawing to visualize this last sentence.) D. Buy a #24, T, and Z drill bit. On the T and Z bits, scribe a line 0.020" down from the end of the bit. Poke the T bit into each hole in the rail. If you can see an air gap above the 0.020" line, you have to remeasure the rail every 100 hours. If you can see an air gap above the 0.020" line on the Z bit, replace the rail. E. Place the seat onto the rail and engage the locking pin. Pull up on the forward edge of the seat and mark a line where the locking pin and top edge of the rail meet. If the locking pin does not go at least 0.15" (a #24 drill bit) into the hole, replace whatever is necessary to achieve this 0.15" depth of engagement. F. The roller housing (the part of the seat that the rollers are bolted onto) is a U-shape. The top of the U is welded/bolted onto the seat. The sides of the U bear on the sides of the rail, and the bottom of the U wraps around the rail itself. Measure the thickness of the side of the U. If the bottom of the U measures less than half this thickness, replace the roller housing. Now again, I said this was a Q&D first cut, but it will at LEAST give you something on which to base a claim other than an eyeball measurement. - -Out of a personal dislike for me, my detractors seem to be overlooking -the most universally basic service that pilots and aviation people do -for each other... they look out for each other and always go over and -above what is minimally required, to help prevent an accident. Well, -MOST of us go over and above, Jim. I am not given the choice of going over and above. If the wear limit is 0.36 and the part measures 0.359, it is airworthy and I do not have the right to claim otherwise. I am within my rights to terminate the inspection and return the aircraft to the owner to take elsewhere if I choose, but I do not have the right to reject the aircraft as unairworthy. That's just the obligation you take on in this profession. Sorry if you want more. I don't inspect to YOUR standards, I inspect to the manufacturer's standards. Now, if you say you want a new limits overhaul, I'm happy to do it -- it is your nickel. I just can't reject a part as unairworthy if it meets service limits. - -I have every legal right to stand by and watch some other pilot take -off with a control lock still installed. In my best "caveat emptor" -voice, I could tell the NTSB investigators that the pilot got what he -deserved, because he didn't follow the checklist and didn't do a -proper pre-flight, and that I haven't a care about his widowed wife -and kids. And that the pilot can further burn in hell because I don't -like him, and worse yet I found his tone of voice a little too -'whining' when he was talking about the preflight in the first place. -It appears that THIS is the same kind of logic some of the posters in -this thread would apply. None of you who hide behind that type of -logic are friends of aviation. Oh, come on. Nobody I saw posting said anything of the kind. What we all said was that you didn't do your homework, you took a road trip and saw a beater airplane, and that you were ****ed that the owner didn't tell you that it was a beater before you got there. NO body said that if the airplane measured unairworthy that you should buy it and fly it. That is stupid. What we said is that IN YOUR OPINION, WITHOUT SO MUCH AS A TAPE MEASURE RULER, you determined that the airplane was likely unairworthy. Get over it. You wasted a tank of gas. - -My intent was to make people aware of a -potentially...POTENTIALLY...unsafe airplane and a DEFINITELY sleazy -seller. I had to tone down and soften several things to protect myself -from a lawsuit. For the same reason, I had to remind everyone that I -am not legally licensed to say whether this airplane was airworthy, -which one poster took to mean I didn't know much about airplanes. I -know more about airplanes (and I honor our un-written agreement to -help each other) than some of the fish in these waters do. NO body said you didn't know much about airplanes, at least not this body. What we said was that there was no hard data in your rant. Now, let's do something positive. Explain, and bowlderize to you heart's content, exactly what this seller did that was sleazy. He may have shown up in rags, smoking a foul cigar, smelling of cheap wine and garlic, but what did he do about selling the airplane that was so sleazy? - -I feel that I have done the right thing by calling people's attention -to this matter. I will do it again tomorrow or the next day. I am -disgusted that it appears some of you wouldn't do it, just because you -didn't have to. If I chose to do so, I'd sure as hell have some basis on which to make my assertions other than the Clem Kaddiddlehopper line about "It just don't look right, it just DON'T look right". - -As for the personal attacks or disparaging comments toward me, I can -live with that far better than I could live with myself if I just sat -back and said "caveat emptor" and allowed this type of behavior to go -un-addressed. And again I ask you for your points and authority to back up your assertions. - -And as for Mr. Weir, I have no idea what I have ever done to earn his -disrespect. He read my original post, looked past all of the substance -and reasoning behind it, and then proclaimed that "all he saw" was a -spoiled brat or an amateur IA wannabee, or whatever. My question, Sir, -is how could you see anything if your view was blocked by the inner -lining of your colon? That was pretty snotty, wasn't it. Get it all out of your system, Bill? Good. I knew you could. Now, I'll make the point once again and stop. There WAS NO SUBSTANCE to your reasoning. None whatsoever other than an opinion not substantiated with data. - -Bill Berle -Los Angeles Jim Grass Valley 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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What is the big deal about worn seat tracks?
They're all worn, unless the airplane has less than 2000 TT or unless they've been replaced. New tracks are (relatively) inexpensive, and, to anyone who is half-way competent with a rivet gun/ bucking bar, they're no big deal to replace. They'll take 10 minutes a piece to drill off, and 10 minutes a piece to rivet new ones back on. As I understand it, the AD is based upon a very few cases where the tracks were so bad, the seat(s) slid back upon takeoff and a stall/spin crash ensued. I have cheap ($25 or so dollar) "auxiliary" seat stops installed on my (currently airworthy) seat tracks which are a backup/fail-safe measure in the event the tracks fail me when I shove in all 145hp for takeoff. Bela P. Havasreti |
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