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#1
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The 3000 hr. life limit was discussed in a previous thread. My findings
were reported there, but in a nutshell: Greg Davison from the FAA in OK City has ben working with the people who support the Centrair line in France to come up with a 3,000 hr inspection protocol that will allow the Pegase models to continue flying. Othe glider manufacturers like Schleicher have a 3000 hr inspection that must be performed (think of it like an annual on steroids) to retain an Airworthiness Certificate. The inspection is extensive- it could cost several hundred dollars and require substantial disassembly of things like ailerons etc. Centrair did not have this provision when the glider was first certified in the US. They are working on it now, and according to Greg (he was at the SSA convention in Arlington this weekend) it should be available this spring. If it is not, he said (without elaborating) that other options may be considered. He stressed that the FAA has no desire to ground (and render worthless) an entire fleet for something like this. I tried to get him to reconsider in the case of the PW-5, but no luck. Just kidding. I hope the PeeWee crowd has a sense of humor. But of course, they have to. Anyway, if I had the money, I'd probably buy all the overtime Pegase gliders and wait for the new AD to come out and bump the selling price up to market value. BTW, as far as I know, all 101A models have the instrument panel that lifts with the canopy. There is also a 101C model that was made for the World Championships. One sold out of Moriarty earlier this year. It has provision for six water ballast bags instead of the normal two or four. I'm not sure about any other differences, except for the winglets. And those are so huge that they almost need their own trailer. Mark628CA |
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#2
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Mark628CA wrote:
The 3000 hr. life limit was discussed in a previous thread. My findings were reported there, but in a nutshell: Greg Davison from the FAA in OK City has ben working with the people who support the Centrair line in France to come up with a 3,000 hr inspection protocol that will allow the Pegase models to continue flying. Othe glider manufacturers like Schleicher have a 3000 hr inspection that must be performed (think of it like an annual on steroids) to retain an Airworthiness Certificate. The inspection is extensive- it could cost several hundred dollars and require substantial disassembly of things like ailerons etc. Centrair did not have this provision when the glider was first certified in the US. They are working on it now, and according to Greg (he was at the SSA convention in Arlington this weekend) it should be available this spring. If it is not, he said (without elaborating) that other options may be considered. He stressed that the FAA has no desire to ground (and render worthless) an entire fleet for something like this. We've also had a French speaking member of our club chat with the Centrair folks a bit too. We have 3 101A's in our fleet (that's half the fleet) and between the 3,000 ruling and waiting on a replacement aileron, things are getting ugly. Last season it was the rudder pedals. Jeremy |
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#3
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And the rudder pedals sucked!
"Jeremy Zawodny" wrote in message ... Mark628CA wrote: The 3000 hr. life limit was discussed in a previous thread. My findings were reported there, but in a nutshell: Greg Davison from the FAA in OK City has ben working with the people who support the Centrair line in France to come up with a 3,000 hr inspection protocol that will allow the Pegase models to continue flying. Othe glider manufacturers like Schleicher have a 3000 hr inspection that must be performed (think of it like an annual on steroids) to retain an Airworthiness Certificate. The inspection is extensive- it could cost several hundred dollars and require substantial disassembly of things like ailerons etc. Centrair did not have this provision when the glider was first certified in the US. They are working on it now, and according to Greg (he was at the SSA convention in Arlington this weekend) it should be available this spring. If it is not, he said (without elaborating) that other options may be considered. He stressed that the FAA has no desire to ground (and render worthless) an entire fleet for something like this. We've also had a French speaking member of our club chat with the Centrair folks a bit too. We have 3 101A's in our fleet (that's half the fleet) and between the 3,000 ruling and waiting on a replacement aileron, things are getting ugly. Last season it was the rudder pedals. Jeremy |
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