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#1
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King KFC 200
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#2
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In the kfc 200, there is very little circuitry downstream
of the attitude bars other than that in the servos. One summing amplifier is about it. So if the bars work correctly, but the controls don't move absolutely one for one with the bars, it's likely the servos. If the controls move in one direction or other when the bars are neutral-- likely is the servo. Bill H. Viperdoc wrote: King KFC 200 |
#3
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One obviously has to have a prepurchase inspection done.
In a perfect world: 1)The inspection would be by a mechanic that is familiar with the aircraft type. 2)The inspection would be done by the mechanic that is going to maintain the plane on an ongoing basis. 3)The inspection is not done by the mechanic that was maintaining the plane. If the plane in question is out of your area how do you do 1,2,3? How is this problem solved? If you have a remote mechanic do the prepurchase, how do you trust the care and honesty of someone you will only do business with once and is far far away? Paul |
#4
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I don't think things have gotten so bad that he is selling his Baron and
looking for another. Jim Burns wrote in message ... One obviously has to have a prepurchase inspection done. In a perfect world: 1)The inspection would be by a mechanic that is familiar with the aircraft type. 2)The inspection would be done by the mechanic that is going to maintain the plane on an ongoing basis. 3)The inspection is not done by the mechanic that was maintaining the plane. If the plane in question is out of your area how do you do 1,2,3? How is this problem solved? If you have a remote mechanic do the prepurchase, how do you trust the care and honesty of someone you will only do business with once and is far far away? Paul |
#5
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I've had this plane for nearly five years, and am happy with its condition
and performance. It is not new to me, and I had an extensive pre-buy/annual prior to the purchase. Short of buying something that burns kerosene (which I can't afford) I'm sticking with it for a while. I expect stuff to break or need replacement periodically. It looks like the roll servo is the culprit- it needs a new motor and drive transistors, along with a new resistor. The strobe problem is likely the power supply, which will also need replacement. The whole thing is likely to be around $2500+. |
#6
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I don't remember where I read it, but I recall an article that talked about
how the servo motors in our autopilots normally run for such short intervals and at slow speed that they can "gum up" or the dust that the brushes create can build up and or the commentator can varnish over. The article suggested using the heading bug, trim, and or test modes to run the servos at high speed first one direction and then the other occasionally, say once per month, to "blow" things out and to scrub the brushes and armature. YMMV, just something I remember reading. Jim "Viperdoc" wrote in message ... I've had this plane for nearly five years, and am happy with its condition and performance. It is not new to me, and I had an extensive pre-buy/annual prior to the purchase. Short of buying something that burns kerosene (which I can't afford) I'm sticking with it for a while. I expect stuff to break or need replacement periodically. It looks like the roll servo is the culprit- it needs a new motor and drive transistors, along with a new resistor. The strobe problem is likely the power supply, which will also need replacement. The whole thing is likely to be around $2500+. |
#7
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#9
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![]() "Ross Richardson" wrote in ... When I had the prepurchase inspection done on my plane I got an insurance rider on the plane and the owner approved me to fly it to my mechanic. The distance was not too far, thank goodness. Worked fine. Turned the rider into an insurance policy when I bought the plane. How did you ASSURE the owner that the plane would come back to his airport if your A&P report was unfavorable. This seems to be the "fear factor" of allowing the inspection off site for every owner. I've heard of pi$$ing contests of "It wasn't like that when I gave you the plane, your mechanic must have broke it", and such. |
#10
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Mike Isaksen wrote:
"Ross Richardson" wrote in ... When I had the prepurchase inspection done on my plane I got an insurance rider on the plane and the owner approved me to fly it to my mechanic. The distance was not too far, thank goodness. Worked fine. Turned the rider into an insurance policy when I bought the plane. How did you ASSURE the owner that the plane would come back to his airport if your A&P report was unfavorable. This seems to be the "fear factor" of allowing the inspection off site for every owner. I've heard of pi$$ing contests of "It wasn't like that when I gave you the plane, your mechanic must have broke it", and such. I had known the owner for some time and he was also a member of our EAA chapter. Plus, I am a good and trustworthy person...... -- Regards, Ross C-172F 180HP KSWI |
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