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#41
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In article ,
Scott Skylane wrote: john smith wrote: New Cessna 152's came from the factory with a Q-tip prop in 1974? 75? This was pre-internet, so the reporting came from the regular news sources at the time (aviation periodicals, regional newspapers, etc). It is difficult to cite a specific source from twenty-five to thirty years ago without a clipping in front of me. If you haven't been around that long, don't bitch about it. You cannot GOOGLE everything. Not everything is available on the web, and alot of what is is of dubious credibility. :-)) Dubious credibility, indeed! Cessna didn't start making the 152 until 1978, and they never, ever delivered a 150 or 152 with a Q-tip prop. Hence my question marks. And, yes they did deliver the 152 with a Q-tip prop. Cessna required flight schools in their Cessna Pilot Center program to purchase a new aircraft every year. I hung out at a small country strip from 1973 until 1979, so I remembered it was in that time frame. The owner of the airport showed all of us the prop as a new feature for that particular model year. |
#42
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![]() john smith wrote: Hence my question marks. And, yes they did deliver the 152 with a Q-tip prop. A Q tip is a constant speed prop. |
#43
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![]() I have never ever seen a 152 with a Q-tip. "john smith" wrote in message ... In article , Scott Skylane wrote: john smith wrote: New Cessna 152's came from the factory with a Q-tip prop in 1974? 75? This was pre-internet, so the reporting came from the regular news sources at the time (aviation periodicals, regional newspapers, etc). It is difficult to cite a specific source from twenty-five to thirty years ago without a clipping in front of me. If you haven't been around that long, don't bitch about it. You cannot GOOGLE everything. Not everything is available on the web, and alot of what is is of dubious credibility. :-)) Dubious credibility, indeed! Cessna didn't start making the 152 until 1978, and they never, ever delivered a 150 or 152 with a Q-tip prop. Hence my question marks. And, yes they did deliver the 152 with a Q-tip prop. Cessna required flight schools in their Cessna Pilot Center program to purchase a new aircraft every year. I hung out at a small country strip from 1973 until 1979, so I remembered it was in that time frame. The owner of the airport showed all of us the prop as a new feature for that particular model year. |
#44
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Hence my question marks. And, yes they did deliver the 152 with a Q-tip
prop. A Q tip is a constant speed prop. Not all of them. |
#45
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john smith wrote:
Hence my question marks. And, yes they did deliver the 152 with a Q-tip prop. Cessna required flight schools in their Cessna Pilot Center program to purchase a new aircraft every year. I hung out at a small country strip from 1973 until 1979, so I remembered it was in that time frame. The owner of the airport showed all of us the prop as a new feature for that particular model year. Hmmm, not to belabor the point, But the Cessna parts catalog does not show any prop other than the standard McCauley "gull wing" design, the TCDS does not list any other prop than the standard McCauley, there are no STC listings for a Q-tip installation on a 152, and in my 24 years in the business, I've never seen nor heard of any such installation. I suspect your memory may be failing you on this point. Perhaps someone did a one-off field approval, but as NEWPS indicated, I don't know of any fixed pitch Q-tips to begin with. Happy Flying! Scott Skylane |
#46
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In article ,
Scott Skylane wrote: john smith wrote: Hence my question marks. And, yes they did deliver the 152 with a Q-tip prop. Cessna required flight schools in their Cessna Pilot Center program to purchase a new aircraft every year. I hung out at a small country strip from 1973 until 1979, so I remembered it was in that time frame. The owner of the airport showed all of us the prop as a new feature for that particular model year. Hmmm, not to belabor the point, But the Cessna parts catalog does not show any prop other than the standard McCauley "gull wing" design, the TCDS does not list any other prop than the standard McCauley, there are no STC listings for a Q-tip installation on a 152, and in my 24 years in the business, I've never seen nor heard of any such installation. I suspect your memory may be failing you on this point. Perhaps someone did a one-off field approval, but as NEWPS indicated, I don't know of any fixed pitch Q-tips to begin with. What is the Gull Wing prop? The prop I saw had the tip bent back maybe 1/4"-3/8". |
#47
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![]() "john smith" wrote in message ... In article , Scott Skylane wrote: john smith wrote: Hence my question marks. And, yes they did deliver the 152 with a Q-tip prop. Cessna required flight schools in their Cessna Pilot Center program to purchase a new aircraft every year. I hung out at a small country strip from 1973 until 1979, so I remembered it was in that time frame. The owner of the airport showed all of us the prop as a new feature for that particular model year. Hmmm, not to belabor the point, But the Cessna parts catalog does not show any prop other than the standard McCauley "gull wing" design, the TCDS does not list any other prop than the standard McCauley, there are no STC listings for a Q-tip installation on a 152, and in my 24 years in the business, I've never seen nor heard of any such installation. I suspect your memory may be failing you on this point. Perhaps someone did a one-off field approval, but as NEWPS indicated, I don't know of any fixed pitch Q-tips to begin with. What is the Gull Wing prop? The prop I saw had the tip bent back maybe 1/4"-3/8". Really bad landing perhaps? |
#48
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john smith wrote:
In article , Scott Skylane wrote: john smith wrote: Hence my question marks. And, yes they did deliver the 152 with a Q-tip prop. Cessna required flight schools in their Cessna Pilot Center program to purchase a new aircraft every year. I hung out at a small country strip from 1973 until 1979, so I remembered it was in that time frame. The owner of the airport showed all of us the prop as a new feature for that particular model year. Hmmm, not to belabor the point, But the Cessna parts catalog does not show any prop other than the standard McCauley "gull wing" design, the TCDS does not list any other prop than the standard McCauley, there are no STC listings for a Q-tip installation on a 152, and in my 24 years in the business, I've never seen nor heard of any such installation. I suspect your memory may be failing you on this point. Perhaps someone did a one-off field approval, but as NEWPS indicated, I don't know of any fixed pitch Q-tips to begin with. What is the Gull Wing prop? The prop I saw had the tip bent back maybe 1/4"-3/8". Hartzell built Q-tip props. McCauley never did. Hartzell does not make fixed-pitched props. Cessna 152s were delivered with fixed-pitch props. Therefore stock Cessna 152s are extremely unlikely to have Hartzell constant-speed Q-tip props bolted to the front of their 115-HP Lycoming engines. They would not fit, to begin with. And they would weigh too much. |
#49
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![]() Dale Scroggins wrote: Hartzell built Q-tip props. McCauley never did. Hartzell does not make fixed-pitched props. Cessna 152s were delivered with fixed-pitch props. Therefore stock Cessna 152s are extremely unlikely to have Hartzell constant-speed Q-tip props bolted to the front of their 115-HP Lycoming engines. They would not fit, to begin with. And they would weigh too much. Does that engine even have a pad for a governor? |
#50
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On 9/20/05 19:28, "Bob Noel" wrote:
In article , "RST Engineering" wrote: [a bunch of stuff snipped] (S)he cannot sign off the annual inspection. 43.11 (a)(5) is quite specific as to what has to happen when the aircraft is inspected and not found airworthy. If you have another section of the regs that countermands this section, please post it. Otherwise I maintain that the inspection is neither complete nor current. Maybe I haven't followed this thread well enough. Are you saying that an Annual Inspection is not complete and valid if there is a list of unairworthy items given to the owner? I don't mean to imply that the aircraft is airworthy or "in annual", rather that the inspection was finished and that any appropriate A&P could sign off the repair of those unairworthy items (as appropriate), right? (In this case I'm asking about a hypothetical case, not the specific stuff earlier in the thread). thanks That's what I thought, Bob. Hopefully someone in the know will confirm this. - Don When once you have tasted flight, you will forever walk the earth with your eyes turned skyward, for there you have been, and there you will always long to return. - Leonardo da Vinci |
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