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#1
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![]() I'm wondering if anyone here owns a Bonanza A36 (or any Bo with a similar wing structure) with high airframe time (10,000 hours)? I ask because my local A&P who rebuilds a lot of wrecked airplanes knows of an A36 that had a nose gear collapse and has been collecting dust in a hangar for the last several years. I don't have all of the details, but I understand it is a mid-80s airframe with about 12,000 hours that was used for some sort of freight delivery. It is missing the engine and prop and obviously needs the nose and nose gear rebuilt, but he does that for a living so that isn't a concern. He thinks he can repair the airframe, replace the engine (he apparently has the appropriate core on hand to rebuild) and prop, paint it and still have less than about $100K in it. I'm considering this, but am quite leery of a Bo wing with that many hours. I know of a lot of strut-braced Cessna's with more hours than that and am not aware of any structural issues. However, I've read about the issues over the years with cracks in the spars of several high time cantilever wing singles such as the Cherokee, the T-34, etc. So, I'd appreciate any information available on the durability of the A36 airframe as it accumulates hours in excess of 10,000. I searched on Trade-a-Plane and found nothing for sale with more than about 7,000 hours. Matt |
#2
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Matt,
Go he http://lists.kjsl.com/pipermail/beec...uary/date.html I posted your question there and you can follow along as the people who would know about these things chime in. Look for the header "High Time A36". All 33, 35, 36 and A36 Bo's have the same wing. The B36 is slightly different. That forum is also a great place for any other Bo questions you may have. Matt Whiting wrote: I'm wondering if anyone here owns a Bonanza A36 (or any Bo with a similar wing structure) with high airframe time (10,000 hours)? I ask because my local A&P who rebuilds a lot of wrecked airplanes knows of an A36 that had a nose gear collapse and has been collecting dust in a hangar for the last several years. I don't have all of the details, but I understand it is a mid-80s airframe with about 12,000 hours that was used for some sort of freight delivery. It is missing the engine and prop and obviously needs the nose and nose gear rebuilt, but he does that for a living so that isn't a concern. He thinks he can repair the airframe, replace the engine (he apparently has the appropriate core on hand to rebuild) and prop, paint it and still have less than about $100K in it. I'm considering this, but am quite leery of a Bo wing with that many hours. I know of a lot of strut-braced Cessna's with more hours than that and am not aware of any structural issues. However, I've read about the issues over the years with cracks in the spars of several high time cantilever wing singles such as the Cherokee, the T-34, etc. So, I'd appreciate any information available on the durability of the A36 airframe as it accumulates hours in excess of 10,000. I searched on Trade-a-Plane and found nothing for sale with more than about 7,000 hours. Matt |
#3
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Newps wrote:
Matt, Go he http://lists.kjsl.com/pipermail/beec...uary/date.html I posted your question there and you can follow along as the people who would know about these things chime in. Look for the header "High Time A36". All 33, 35, 36 and A36 Bo's have the same wing. The B36 is slightly different. That forum is also a great place for any other Bo questions you may have. Mucho gracias. Matt |
#4
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On Feb 6, 8:31*pm, Newps wrote:
Matt, Go he http://lists.kjsl.com/pipermail/beec...uary/date.html I posted your question there and you can follow along as the people who would know about these things chime in. *Look for the header "High Time A36". *All 33, 35, 36 and A36 Bo's have the same wing. *The B36 is slightly different. *That forum is also a great place for any other Bo questions you may have. Matt Whiting wrote: I'm wondering if anyone here owns a Bonanza A36 (or any Bo with a similar wing structure) with high airframe time (10,000 hours)? I ask because my local A&P who rebuilds a lot of wrecked airplanes knows of an A36 that had a nose gear collapse and has been collecting dust in a hangar for the last several years. *I don't have all of the details, but I understand it is a mid-80s airframe with about 12,000 hours that was used for some sort of freight delivery. *It is missing the engine and prop and obviously needs the nose and nose gear rebuilt, but he does that for a living so that isn't a concern. He thinks he can repair the airframe, replace the engine (he apparently has the appropriate core on hand to rebuild) and prop, paint it and still have less than about $100K in it. *I'm considering this, but am quite leery of a Bo wing with that many hours. *I know of a lot of strut-braced Cessna's with more hours than that and am not aware of any structural issues. *However, I've read about the issues over the years with cracks in the spars of several high time cantilever wing singles such as the Cherokee, the T-34, etc. So, I'd appreciate any information available on the durability of the A36 airframe as it accumulates hours in excess of 10,000. *I searched on Trade-a-Plane and found nothing for sale with more than about 7,000 hours. Matt- Hide quoted text - - Show quoted text - Man, that hurts my eyes. Don't you guys have a forum like we have in the Mooney community. Just grab a copy of FUDforum or phpBB, etc. You can still fork it to an email list for the old timers. -Robert |
#5
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![]() Robert M. Gary wrote: Man, that hurts my eyes. Don't you guys have a forum like we have in the Mooney community. Just grab a copy of FUDforum or phpBB, etc. You can still fork it to an email list for the old timers. -Robert It's an old guy forum. 99% of those guys get those messages by email, that's how it was designed. Whenever the subject comes up I always suggest that they convert but they're old and crotchety. I can't imagine getting 4000 plus emails a month. We do have other forums that are setup using standard forum software. This email list has the best info however. |
#6
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Newps wrote:
Robert M. Gary wrote: Man, that hurts my eyes. Don't you guys have a forum like we have in the Mooney community. Just grab a copy of FUDforum or phpBB, etc. You can still fork it to an email list for the old timers. -Robert It's an old guy forum. 99% of those guys get those messages by email, that's how it was designed. Whenever the subject comes up I always suggest that they convert but they're old and crotchety. I can't imagine getting 4000 plus emails a month. Hey! 46 isn't old! Maybe I do fit the crotchety description, though, as I do like the e-mail format. I find it much easier to skip through things when its all text and not cluttered up with html (I use a plain text email client). Really, if you can't stand the volume, stay out of the kitchen (er, or something like that). Seriously there is a lot of stuff there and its stays fairly well on topic. Its a real pain if you aren't good and friendly with all the features of your mail software. And what you doing, Scott, throwing more Mooney fresh meat to the wolfs? -- Frank Stutzman Bonanza N494B "Hula Girl" Boise, ID |
#7
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Depends on how the 10K hours were made...
Part 135 hauling air taxi passengers to the Mustang Ranch, Corporate hauler, scenic flights over Catalina Island,etc... Then no problemo, go for it... Hauling bank checks at night across the Rocky Mountains, t'storms and turbulence be damned? Not my idea of a good airframe to put money in... denny |
#8
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![]() Frank Stutzman wrote: And what you doing, Scott, throwing more Mooney fresh meat to the wolfs? Somebody has to educate these people on what a tractor they're flying. |
#9
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On Feb 7, 8:29*pm, Frank Stutzman wrote:
Newps wrote: Robert M. Gary wrote: Man, that hurts my eyes. Don't you guys have a forum like we have in the Mooney community. Just grab a copy of FUDforum or phpBB, etc. You can still fork it to an email list for the old timers. -Robert It's an old guy forum. *99% of those guys get those messages by email, that's how it was designed. *Whenever the subject comes up I always suggest that they convert but they're old and crotchety. *I can't imagine getting 4000 plus emails a month. Hey! *46 isn't old! *Maybe I do fit the crotchety description, though, as I do like the e-mail format. *I find it much easier to skip through things when its all text and not cluttered up with html (I use a plain text email client). That's what forums do. They organize things into topic and make it easy for you to follow or ignore certain topics. When you are following a topic it allows you to see updates. Plus its a great format for archival and search. The Mooney list used to have an archive just like what Newps posted. Unless you know when something was posted you'll never find it. The forum solves that. -Robert |
#10
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![]() Robert M. Gary wrote: That's what forums do. They organize things into topic and make it easy for you to follow or ignore certain topics. When you are following a topic it allows you to see updates. Plus its a great format for archival and search. The Mooney list used to have an archive just like what Newps posted. Unless you know when something was posted you'll never find it. The forum solves that. -Robert There is a search function available for the list. What most guys seem to do is save posts that have value to them in a separate folder. For example all the 520 and 550 Bo's have gear driven alternators and getting that gear overhauled is a popular topic. One only needs to save any post with the names and phone numbers of reputable shops that do the overhauls. Failing that I can simply send an email to the group from my phone anywhere I have a signal and get an answer in less than 15 minutes. Having said all that I would still rather have it in a forum format. |
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