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#1
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Things I Have Learned As First Time Buyer/Owner (long)
Well I learned when doing a pre buy be sure you take it to the avionics shop
and have all the avionics and instruments checked out before you buy my mistake only thing that was not checked at the pre buy waqs the avionics. I was more concerned about the engine and airframe. I had the transponder checked about 3 weeks ago all tested ok Well today while flying in class C airspace (KPDX) the transponder went out the tower did not like that very much and was told to depart their airspace ASAP. I landed at the nearest airport and went to an avionics shop what do you know the transponder stopped receiving and transmitting at it happens things fail. The next airplane I buy ill have the avionics checked out in the pre buy defiantly. Now all my avionics and instruments are now new and or checked out and working 100% correctly. I have been told that I should contact my local FSDO about the A&P-IA that signed things off as things were not done correctly and could have caused major problems. Not sure I want to do that and not sure what I should do. The last avionics shop told me my ADF was bad I sent it out to a shop of my choice it checked out ok no repairs needed. It was my ADF antenna that was the problem a little scotch bright took care of that. Just a little corrosion on the wire antenna connection. They also told me my Glide Slope Was Not fully deflecting and my VOR was off 8 degrees and needed to be replaced. Retested by another shop and well it is well within factory limits humm. They set my altimeter settings wrong + 110' on the ground yeiks. Said my marker beacon receiver was bad and entire audio panel needed replaced with a new one. Nope it was a $3.00 diode. Now I am wondering if they over pressurized my pito system and blew my airspeed indicator diaphragm to try and sell me a new one of them also who knows. Well 5 hours at the avionics shop today and a rebuilt Transponder, Repaired 3LMB and a new sticker in the log book showing how the problems that the last shop goofed up on. Now all is fixed and what a joy to fly every things works very very very well. I am glad that my transponder went out on me today and forced me to land at a larger airport to get it fixed. I was kinda questioning in the back of my mind the business ethics of the last avionics shop, after the ADF came back from the repair house ok with no problems. I think I will let it go as a $600.00 lesson learned and steer business away from that avionics shop that goofed things up and refer to the shop I went to today at leased they have proper equipment to do it right. They had equipment that looked like it needed a manual larger than a Linux manual to operate. I will not mention names until I confront the last avionics shop with my paperwork showing them that items that they said were defective were not ill see what they will do about the diagnostic time they charged me. Lessons learned: Don't ignore the avionics on a pre buy even if there is not an avionics shop at the airport you buy it at take it to one get it checked worth the $300.00 in labor you may save you a few thousand. Don't trust shops that tell you it cannot be fixed and you must replace it and try and sell you a entire new panel for $10,000 get a second opinion it may save you a headache and a bunch of money. Only go to shops that have modern equipment to do the job right ask to see their equipment and library you may see binders of schematics that's a good if they will show you bad if they don't have it, You may see a few newer turbine aircraft in their hanger and higher rates (+$20.00 an hour more than others but modern $30,000+ test equipment has to be paid for some how) You may want to pay now or you will be paying pay later. I am an electronics engineer by trade I am not comfortable paying $80.00 to have a $3.00 part replaced but way better than paying $1,800 for a new audio panel. Biggest lesson learned is who not to deal with well worth the $600 I had to spent today to learn that. |
#2
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In article ,
MRQB wrote: I think I will let it go as a $600.00 lesson learned The thing I have learned as a first time buyer/owner: The headaches associated with owning a plane can easily suck all the joy out of ownership. Though it goes strongly against my nature I'm slowly learning to let the little irritations go so that they don't sour my outlook on flying. I could list a half dozen little irritations as examples, but that would set me back on my 12 step "let it go" program. :-) -- Ben Jackson http://www.ben.com/ |
#3
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"MRQB" wrote in message
... Well I learned when doing a pre buy be sure you take it to the avionics shop and have all the avionics and instruments checked out before you buy my mistake only thing that was not checked at the pre buy waqs the avionics. I was more concerned about the engine and airframe. I had the transponder checked about 3 weeks ago all tested ok Well today while flying in class C airspace (KPDX) the transponder went out the tower did not like that very much and was told to depart their airspace ASAP. I landed at the nearest airport and went to an avionics shop what do you know the transponder stopped receiving and transmitting at it happens things fail. The next airplane I buy ill have the avionics checked out in the pre buy defiantly. Now all my avionics and instruments are now new and or checked out and working 100% correctly. I have been told that I should contact my local FSDO about the A&P-IA that signed things off as things were not done correctly and could have caused major problems. Not sure I want to do that and not sure what I should do. Why do you think things were not done correctly? Things do break you know. Unless you have specific reason to believe the electronics shop screwed up, I'd leave it. The last avionics shop told me my ADF was bad I sent it out to a shop of my choice it checked out ok no repairs needed. It was my ADF antenna that was the problem a little scotch bright took care of that. Just a little corrosion on the wire antenna connection. They also told me my Glide Slope Was Not fully deflecting and my VOR was off 8 degrees and needed to be replaced. Retested by another shop and well it is well within factory limits humm. They set my altimeter settings wrong + 110' on the ground yeiks. Said my marker beacon receiver was bad and entire audio panel needed replaced with a new one. Nope it was a $3.00 diode. Now I am wondering if they over pressurized my pito system and blew my airspeed indicator diaphragm to try and sell me a new one of them also who knows. You do seem to have far more problems than most people I know. How did you pick the shop? Who did other pilots at the airport recommend? You can test your own VOR you know. It's easy. I check mine every month. Well 5 hours at the avionics shop today and a rebuilt Transponder, Repaired 3LMB and a new sticker in the log book showing how the problems that the last shop goofed up on. Now all is fixed and what a joy to fly every things works very very very well. Your log book is filling up with gripes about previous shops? I am glad that my transponder went out on me today and forced me to land at a larger airport to get it fixed. I was kinda questioning in the back of my mind the business ethics of the last avionics shop, after the ADF came back from the repair house ok with no problems. I think I will let it go as a $600.00 lesson learned and steer business away from that avionics shop that goofed things up and refer to the shop I went to today at leased they have proper equipment to do it right. They had equipment that looked like it needed a manual larger than a Linux manual to operate. I will not mention names until I confront the last avionics shop with my paperwork showing them that items that they said were defective were not ill see what they will do about the diagnostic time they charged me. Aren't you the guy who was threatening to sue an FBO for not having a specific plane available for you when you wanted it? Flying is about fun, not confrontation. I suspect you'll end up being blacklisted yourself if you're not careful. Then what would you do? Lessons learned: Don't ignore the avionics on a pre buy even if there is not an avionics shop at the airport you buy it at take it to one get it checked worth the $300.00 in labor you may save you a few thousand. Don't trust shops that tell you it cannot be fixed and you must replace it and try and sell you a entire new panel for $10,000 get a second opinion it may save you a headache and a bunch of money. Only go to shops that have modern equipment to do the job right ask to see their equipment and library you may see binders of schematics that's a good if they will show you bad if they don't have it, You may see a few newer turbine aircraft in their hanger and higher rates (+$20.00 an hour more than others but modern $30,000+ test equipment has to be paid for some how) You may want to pay now or you will be paying pay later. I am an electronics engineer by trade I am not comfortable paying $80.00 to have a $3.00 part replaced but way better than paying $1,800 for a new audio panel. Biggest lesson learned is who not to deal with well worth the $600 I had to spent today to learn that. It's cheaper to learn who you *should* be dealing with. My mechanic has guided me to excellent electronics shops and engine repairers. Ask around & you'll find who to deal with and who to avoid. |
#4
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Tony Cox wrote: Why do you think things were not done correctly? Things do break you know. Unless you have specific reason to believe the electronics shop screwed up, I'd leave it. Right on. When I picked up my 150, everything was working correctly. Before I got 30 miles away on the trip homw, the NAV radio had gone TU. The COM side died a few months later. George Patterson This marriage is off to a shaky start. The groom just asked the band to play "Your cheatin' heart", and the bride just requested "Don't come home a'drinkin' with lovin' on your mind". |
#5
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Avionics doesn't last forever. It can be working fine one day and go
south the next day. It's not anyone's fault. When an A&P/IA signs something off it just means it was functioning within specs at the time they checked it. It's not a guarrantee. "MRQB" wrote in message ... Well I learned when doing a pre buy be sure you take it to the avionics shop and have all the avionics and instruments checked out before you buy my mistake only thing that was not checked at the pre buy waqs the avionics. I was more concerned about the engine and airframe. I had the transponder checked about 3 weeks ago all tested ok Well today while flying in class C airspace (KPDX) the transponder went out the tower did not like that very much and was told to depart their airspace ASAP. I landed at the nearest airport and went to an avionics shop what do you know the transponder stopped receiving and transmitting at it happens things fail. The next airplane I buy ill have the avionics checked out in the pre buy defiantly. Now all my avionics and instruments are now new and or checked out and working 100% correctly. I have been told that I should contact my local FSDO about the A&P-IA that signed things off as things were not done correctly and could have caused major problems. Not sure I want to do that and not sure what I should do. The last avionics shop told me my ADF was bad I sent it out to a shop of my choice it checked out ok no repairs needed. It was my ADF antenna that was the problem a little scotch bright took care of that. Just a little corrosion on the wire antenna connection. They also told me my Glide Slope Was Not fully deflecting and my VOR was off 8 degrees and needed to be replaced. Retested by another shop and well it is well within factory limits humm. They set my altimeter settings wrong + 110' on the ground yeiks. Said my marker beacon receiver was bad and entire audio panel needed replaced with a new one. Nope it was a $3.00 diode. Now I am wondering if they over pressurized my pito system and blew my airspeed indicator diaphragm to try and sell me a new one of them also who knows. Well 5 hours at the avionics shop today and a rebuilt Transponder, Repaired 3LMB and a new sticker in the log book showing how the problems that the last shop goofed up on. Now all is fixed and what a joy to fly every things works very very very well. I am glad that my transponder went out on me today and forced me to land at a larger airport to get it fixed. I was kinda questioning in the back of my mind the business ethics of the last avionics shop, after the ADF came back from the repair house ok with no problems. I think I will let it go as a $600.00 lesson learned and steer business away from that avionics shop that goofed things up and refer to the shop I went to today at leased they have proper equipment to do it right. They had equipment that looked like it needed a manual larger than a Linux manual to operate. I will not mention names until I confront the last avionics shop with my paperwork showing them that items that they said were defective were not ill see what they will do about the diagnostic time they charged me. Lessons learned: Don't ignore the avionics on a pre buy even if there is not an avionics shop at the airport you buy it at take it to one get it checked worth the $300.00 in labor you may save you a few thousand. Don't trust shops that tell you it cannot be fixed and you must replace it and try and sell you a entire new panel for $10,000 get a second opinion it may save you a headache and a bunch of money. Only go to shops that have modern equipment to do the job right ask to see their equipment and library you may see binders of schematics that's a good if they will show you bad if they don't have it, You may see a few newer turbine aircraft in their hanger and higher rates (+$20.00 an hour more than others but modern $30,000+ test equipment has to be paid for some how) You may want to pay now or you will be paying pay later. I am an electronics engineer by trade I am not comfortable paying $80.00 to have a $3.00 part replaced but way better than paying $1,800 for a new audio panel. Biggest lesson learned is who not to deal with well worth the $600 I had to spent today to learn that. |
#6
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Otis Winslow wrote: When an A&P/IA signs something off it just means it was functioning within specs at the time they checked it. For that matter, I can't recall any time that an A&P or IA signed off on my avionics. It's not part of what they check for an annual inspection. The only time anyone has signed off one of my units was when I took it to an avionics shop for repair or for some required tests, and that person is not an A&P. George Patterson This marriage is off to a shaky start. The groom just asked the band to play "Your cheatin' heart", and the bride just requested "Don't come home a'drinkin' with lovin' on your mind". |
#7
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"Tony Cox" wrote in message ink.net... "MRQB" wrote in message ... Well I learned when doing a pre buy be sure you take it to the avionics shop and have all the avionics and instruments checked out before you buy my mistake only thing that was not checked at the pre buy waqs the avionics. I was more concerned about the engine and airframe. I had the transponder checked about 3 weeks ago all tested ok Well today while flying in class C airspace (KPDX) the transponder went out the tower did not like that very much and was told to depart their airspace ASAP. I landed at the nearest airport and went to an avionics shop what do you know the transponder stopped receiving and transmitting at it happens things fail. The next airplane I buy ill have the avionics checked out in the pre buy defiantly. Now all my avionics and instruments are now new and or checked out and working 100% correctly. I have been told that I should contact my local FSDO about the A&P-IA that signed things off as things were not done correctly and could have caused major problems. Not sure I want to do that and not sure what I should do. Why do you think things were not done correctly? Things do break you know. Unless you have specific reason to believe the electronics shop screwed up, I'd leave it. I am not going to do any thing except for confront the shop about their unethical business tactics. The last avionics shop told me my ADF was bad I sent it out to a shop of my choice it checked out ok no repairs needed. It was my ADF antenna that was the problem a little scotch bright took care of that. Just a little corrosion on the wire antenna connection. They also told me my Glide Slope Was Not fully deflecting and my VOR was off 8 degrees and needed to be replaced. Retested by another shop and well it is well within factory limits humm. They set my altimeter settings wrong + 110' on the ground yeiks. Said my marker beacon receiver was bad and entire audio panel needed replaced with a new one. Nope it was a $3.00 diode. Now I am wondering if they over pressurized my pito system and blew my airspeed indicator diaphragm to try and sell me a new one of them also who knows. You do seem to have far more problems than most people I know. How did you pick the shop? Who did other pilots at the airport recommend? Recomendation's from other pilots that i do not know at the local airport You can test your own VOR you know. It's easy. I check mine every month. Please explain how? Well 5 hours at the avionics shop today and a rebuilt Transponder, Repaired 3LMB and a new sticker in the log book showing how the problems that the last shop goofed up on. Now all is fixed and what a joy to fly every things works very very very well. Your log book is filling up with gripes about previous shops? No gripes about the other shops in the log book just records of things being done over again the gripes are on the A&P's diagnostic paperwork. I am glad that my transponder went out on me today and forced me to land at a larger airport to get it fixed. I was kinda questioning in the back of my mind the business ethics of the last avionics shop, after the ADF came back from the repair house ok with no problems. I think I will let it go as a $600.00 lesson learned and steer business away from that avionics shop that goofed things up and refer to the shop I went to today at leased they have proper equipment to do it right. They had equipment that looked like it needed a manual larger than a Linux manual to operate. I will not mention names until I confront the last avionics shop with my paperwork showing them that items that they said were defective were not ill see what they will do about the diagnostic time they charged me. Aren't you the guy who was threatening to sue an FBO for not having a specific plane available for you when you wanted it? Flying is about fun, not confrontation. I suspect you'll end up being blacklisted yourself if you're not careful. Then what would you do? I am a fair person, the only thing I did was ponder the thought to get pre paid funds back for unused block time from the FBO as a last resort, we resolved it by other means that satisfied both of us. But you are probably the type person that if someone ripped you off for a few hundred dollars or even thousands you would not confront them. Well I will confront them! maybe the last avionics shop's testing equipment is out of calibration and don't know it, it can happen! I know on my equipment for cretin jobs I must have calibration certificates for my testing equipment. Is it required some ware in the FAR's for instrument and avionics testing? Lessons learned: Don't ignore the avionics on a pre buy even if there is not an avionics shop at the airport you buy it at take it to one get it checked worth the $300.00 in labor you may save you a few thousand. Don't trust shops that tell you it cannot be fixed and you must replace it and try and sell you a entire new panel for $10,000 get a second opinion it may save you a headache and a bunch of money. Only go to shops that have modern equipment to do the job right ask to see their equipment and library you may see binders of schematics that's a good if they will show you bad if they don't have it, You may see a few newer turbine aircraft in their hanger and higher rates (+$20.00 an hour more than others but modern $30,000+ test equipment has to be paid for some how) You may want to pay now or you will be paying pay later. I am an electronics engineer by trade I am not comfortable paying $80.00 to have a $3.00 part replaced but way better than paying $1,800 for a new audio panel. Biggest lesson learned is who not to deal with well worth the $600 I had to spent today to learn that. It's cheaper to learn who you *should* be dealing with. My mechanic has guided me to excellent electronics shops and engine repairers. Ask around & you'll find who to deal with and who to avoid. You live and learn right, I think I found a shop that is highly respected & fits my service standards but most everyone says they are to expensive not really if you think about it. "Yes you have a bad part this is the part and this is why it went out replace part check unit to factory specs as listed in the factory service manual not from memory problem solved" Seems like this shop has the proper tools & knowledge to fix things properly. It is well worth the extra expense rather than have a shop with little knowledge spend unnecessary hours working on your equipment at lower rates will equal the same rates or even higher rates. |
#8
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"MRQB" wrote in message
... "Tony Cox" wrote in message ink.net... You can test your own VOR you know. It's easy. I check mine every month. Please explain how? The AFD has a list of VOR receiver check points which list the direction and distance over various points on the ground, or in some cases *on* the ground. Just go there and see what your VOR/DME says. There are also VOR test facilities at different airports. You can also check one VOR against another, if you have two. Now in my case, I just open my hangar door and there's BLD on top of the hill just 3.1 miles away. Not everyone is so lucky. |
#9
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"MRQB" wrote in message
... But you are probably the type person that if someone ripped you off for a few hundred dollars or even thousands you would not confront them. Well I will confront them! Not at all. If someone ripped me off I'd be ****ed. But I generally give people the benefit of the doubt. I get the impression that you are spoiling for a fight with just about everyone you deal with, so I'm suggesting to you that you lighten up a bit before shops stop dealing with *you*. Most of these places have slim profit margins & word will soon get around that you are going to be more trouble than the few dollars they'll be making from you is worth. maybe the last avionics shop's testing equipment is out of calibration and don't know it, it can happen! I know on my equipment for cretin jobs I must have calibration certificates for my testing equipment. Is it required some ware in the FAR's for instrument and avionics testing? Of course. Certified repair shops are highly regulated. |
#10
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I am not spoiling for a fight!!! I just don't like being told things are bad
and need to be replaced when they are not and being charged for it if you took something in for repair and something seemed to be working right and they told you that is it not working and needed to be replaced and other things are broken and could not be serviced I bet you would get a second opinion from another shop before replacing a $1,000 piece of equipment and that what I did. Seemed like the last shop just wanted to sell me all new avionics being dishonest to customers is a bad thing. "Tony Cox" wrote in message ink.net... "MRQB" wrote in message ... But you are probably the type person that if someone ripped you off for a few hundred dollars or even thousands you would not confront them. Well I will confront them! Not at all. If someone ripped me off I'd be ****ed. But I generally give people the benefit of the doubt. I get the impression that you are spoiling for a fight with just about everyone you deal with, so I'm suggesting to you that you lighten up a bit before shops stop dealing with *you*. Most of these places have slim profit margins & word will soon get around that you are going to be more trouble than the few dollars they'll be making from you is worth. maybe the last avionics shop's testing equipment is out of calibration and don't know it, it can happen! I know on my equipment for cretin jobs I must have calibration certificates for my testing equipment. Is it required some ware in the FAR's for instrument and avionics testing? Of course. Certified repair shops are highly regulated. |
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