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#1
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For those of you unaware the FAA has issued an emergency AD
(2004-06-52) on March 18, 2004 that requires any R22 blade older than 10 years may no longer be used. The basis for the AD is questionable. Little if any documented research was done to verify that the age of the blade has any effect on what caused these failures. From my own research it appears the AD and the failure problem are disjoint and the AD will not solve the problem...but it will cost R22 owners a fortune to replace blades older than 10 years. Please read the material below and help change this overly severe AD. If there is a problem it should be solved out in the open where all owners can voice their opinions instead of behind closed doors. The website below documents the abuse of the R22 by some mustering operators in Australia. The crashes that resulted from this abuse (main rotor blade failure) were used as the basis (at least in part…50%) for the US AD. After reading this website and the CASA and ATSB websites you will see that what's been going on in Australia has been on the FAA and Robinsons radar for years. This AD is far in access of any kind of reasonable response to these crashes considering we here in the US have never had a blade failure and are not mustering in these conditions. For instance: The documentation says that many Australian mustering operators average 4000 to 6000 hours between overhauls! That's double the normal life! The ships are run 8 to 12 hours a day…every day and in very hot tropical climates and the ships appear to be subjected to a higher load spectrum then what they were designed for. Please take the time to research this for yourself. Then write your congressman and let him/her know you want this AD modified! I don't know about you but I don't have a spare $15,000, $21,000 or $28,000 as the case may be. http://wave.prohosting.com/tcamiga/australiapage1.htm |
#2
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OK. Then what's the MTBUR in hours on the blades? Or are you just
suggesting an unlimited retirement life? What has your "research" shown? |
#3
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![]() I talked to an A&P about this and he said that its normally 2200 hours or 12 years whichever comes first. Now the FAA wants to make it 2200 hours or 10 years and only for the blades with certain serial numbers. Most of the ones he services never get past 5 years before he has to change them anyway because of the hours. Dennis. "Bob" wrote: OK. Then what's the MTBUR in hours on the blades? Or are you just suggesting an unlimited retirement life? What has your "research" shown? Dennis Hawkins n4mwd AT amsat DOT org (humans know what to do) "A RECESSION is when you know somebody who is out of work. A DEPRESSION is when YOU are out of work. A RECOVERY is when all the H-1B's are out of work." To find out what an H-1B is and how Congress is using them to put Americans out of work, visit the following web site and click on the "Exporting America" CNN news video: http://zazona.com/ShameH1B/MediaClips.htm |
#4
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That's not accurate. The current standard for the R22 dash 2 blades is
2200 hours whatever the age. The year limit is only in the Robinson service manual and not the type certification and therefore is not applicable. Your blades are good for 2200 hours regardless of age. Many owners (including me) have bought used blades with hours left so that we wouldn't have to buy the very expensive new ones. I'd never use 2200 hours anyway. I just spent 5000 bucks on a set of blades after Robinson representatives told me that it was O.K. to buy them and a good deal. That was November 2003. Then, a couple months later the AD comes out making them worthless. At the place I hanger my ship and take lessons they have to buy 2 new sets of blades for nearly $60,000 because the blades they currently have are over 10 years old. One set still has 600 hours left. Talk about a shafting! This AD might put a lot of training outfits out of business. There never has been a crash from blade failure in the US and my research found that for the crashes that I can verify the age (that's all but one crash) and the same crashes the FAA is using as the basis for the AD (three in Australia with the last one being the one they cite in the AD and the one in Israel on the AD) happened on blades that were younger then 10 (the last crash in Australia the blades were 9 years old and the crash before that the blades were only 4 years old but rumored to have over 5000 hours on them and I haven't heard yet about the Israeli crash and when I talked to the FAA they couldn't give me a firm age either) years. These blades failed from abuse and would have failed no matter what the rules were. This is a huge shafting of R22 owners and a windfall for RHC. Please read the Australian story on this link. It will open your eyes. Then write your congressman and ask for an investigation. http://wave.prohosting.com/tcamiga/australiapage1.htm wrote in message ... I talked to an A&P about this and he said that its normally 2200 hours or 12 years whichever comes first. Now the FAA wants to make it 2200 hours or 10 years and only for the blades with certain serial numbers. Most of the ones he services never get past 5 years before he has to change them anyway because of the hours. Dennis. "Bob" wrote: OK. Then what's the MTBUR in hours on the blades? Or are you just suggesting an unlimited retirement life? What has your "research" shown? Dennis Hawkins n4mwd AT amsat DOT org (humans know what to do) "A RECESSION is when you know somebody who is out of work. A DEPRESSION is when YOU are out of work. A RECOVERY is when all the H-1B's are out of work." To find out what an H-1B is and how Congress is using them to put Americans out of work, visit the following web site and click on the "Exporting America" CNN news video: http://zazona.com/ShameH1B/MediaClips.htm |
#5
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![]() "rotortrash" wrote in message m... That's not accurate. The current standard for the R22 dash 2 blades is 2200 hours whatever the age. The year limit is only in the Robinson service manual and not the type certification and therefore is not applicable. Your blades are good for 2200 hours regardless of age. Many owners (including me) have bought used blades with hours left so that we wouldn't have to buy the very expensive new ones. I'd never use 2200 hours anyway. I just spent 5000 bucks on a set of blades after Robinson representatives told me that it was O.K. to buy them and a good deal. That was November 2003. Then, a couple months later the AD comes out making them worthless. At the place I hanger my ship and take lessons they have to buy 2 new sets of blades for nearly $60,000 because the blades they currently have are over 10 years old. One set still has 600 hours left. Talk about a shafting! This AD might put a lot of training outfits out of business. There never has been a crash from blade failure in the US and my research found that for the crashes that I can verify the age (that's all but one crash) and the same crashes the FAA is using as the basis for the AD (three in Australia with the last one being the one they cite in the AD and the one in Israel on the AD) happened on blades that were younger then 10 (the last crash in Australia the blades were 9 years old and the crash before that the blades were only 4 years old but rumored to have over 5000 hours on them and I haven't heard yet about the Israeli crash and when I talked to the FAA they couldn't give me a firm age either) years. These blades failed from abuse and would have failed no matter what the rules were. This is a huge shafting of R22 owners and a windfall for RHC. Please read the Australian story on this link. It will open your eyes. Then write your congressman and ask for an investigation. http://wave.prohosting.com/tcamiga/australiapage1.htm wrote in message ... I talked to an A&P about this and he said that its normally 2200 hours or 12 years whichever comes first. Now the FAA wants to make it 2200 hours or 10 years and only for the blades with certain serial numbers. Most of the ones he services never get past 5 years before he has to change them anyway because of the hours. Dennis. "Bob" wrote: OK. Then what's the MTBUR in hours on the blades? Or are you just suggesting an unlimited retirement life? What has your "research" shown? Dennis Hawkins n4mwd AT amsat DOT org (humans know what to do) "A RECESSION is when you know somebody who is out of work. A DEPRESSION is when YOU are out of work. A RECOVERY is when all the H-1B's are out of work." To find out what an H-1B is and how Congress is using them to put Americans out of work, visit the following web site and click on the "Exporting America" CNN news video: http://zazona.com/ShameH1B/MediaClips.htm I don't believe the 2200hrs whatever the age thing....... There are many composite materials/glues used in the production of rotor blades. After a certain age these materials 'break down' and the complex structure becomes 'unstable'. They then no longer perform as in the design criteria. If someone says replace at 2200hrs or 10 years, then do it - or risk serious damage to your aircraft, yourself or your passengers. Clive Clive |
#6
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#7
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#9
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(rotortrash) wrote:
2200 hours whatever the age. The year limit is only in the Robinson service manual and not the type certification and therefore is not applicable. Your blades are good for 2200 hours regardless of age. Thanks for posting this. This is good to know. and take lessons they have to buy 2 new sets of blades for nearly $60,000 because the blades they currently have are over 10 years old. 2 sets = $60K 1 set = $30K I didn't realize they were that expensive. Aren't they normally changed as part of the 2200 hour megservice? The whole service is only about $90K I thought. One set still has 600 hours left. Talk about a shafting! This AD might put a lot of training outfits out of business. Where exactly is that hangar - what airport, city? but rumored to have over 5000 hours on them and I haven't heard yet I also heard rumors about using it to trim hedges and low RPM. Dennis H. Dennis Hawkins n4mwd AT amsat DOT org (humans know what to do) "A RECESSION is when you know somebody who is out of work. A DEPRESSION is when YOU are out of work. A RECOVERY is when all the H-1B's are out of work." To find out what an H-1B is and how Congress is using them to put Americans out of work, visit the following web site and click on the "Exporting America" CNN news video: http://zazona.com/ShameH1B/MediaClips.htm |
#10
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Your right Dennis the blades are included in the overhaul. Seperately
they cost $28,500 and you may recieve some credit (normally about 2400 I think) but that's it. RHC is giving some incentives but they are very iffy. You might get a break or they may not give it to you. Any way you slice it blades are expensive. Please read the Australian website and write your congressman. I can't do this alone. The AD is not based on the truth. If I were the FAA and they had to prove to me the necessity for this AD it would have NO CHANCE AT ALL! Conversly, if I wanted to say, come up with an alternative method for changing oil on a plane, the FAA would MAKE ME PROVE beyond any doubt that my method worked and worked every time. They do not require the same rigor of themselves. For this AD they didn't provide one shred of concrete engineering evidence. When I asked where's the research the non-response I got was "how many more people have to die". No kidding that's what the FAA said to me. Can you believe that? How ridiculous. There's something very wrong going on here. wrote in message ... (rotortrash) wrote: 2200 hours whatever the age. The year limit is only in the Robinson service manual and not the type certification and therefore is not applicable. Your blades are good for 2200 hours regardless of age. Thanks for posting this. This is good to know. and take lessons they have to buy 2 new sets of blades for nearly $60,000 because the blades they currently have are over 10 years old. 2 sets = $60K 1 set = $30K I didn't realize they were that expensive. Aren't they normally changed as part of the 2200 hour megservice? The whole service is only about $90K I thought. One set still has 600 hours left. Talk about a shafting! This AD might put a lot of training outfits out of business. Where exactly is that hangar - what airport, city? but rumored to have over 5000 hours on them and I haven't heard yet I also heard rumors about using it to trim hedges and low RPM. Dennis H. Dennis Hawkins n4mwd AT amsat DOT org (humans know what to do) "A RECESSION is when you know somebody who is out of work. A DEPRESSION is when YOU are out of work. A RECOVERY is when all the H-1B's are out of work." To find out what an H-1B is and how Congress is using them to put Americans out of work, visit the following web site and click on the "Exporting America" CNN news video: http://zazona.com/ShameH1B/MediaClips.htm |
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