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In the latest DG newsletter:
http://www.dg-flugzeugbau.de/newsletter-138.html As I read Dirks' comments, Weber is full of crap. I also think Weber shot himself in the foot by publishing Dirks' comments. As laid out by Dirks, the rules say "the latest version" of the manual has to be used. He DOES NOT say that EASA requires it to be updated ever, much less every year. Only that it be updated "if necessary," but if changes are made, then those manuals have to be made available and used. The manuals need not be forced on people. Dirks says, " Under 21.A.57 it states that the TC holder shall update all manuals if necessary. Under 21.A.61 (b) it is stated that the TC must make the changes to the instructions of continued airworthiness (maintenance manuals) available to all known operators etc.." [emphasis mine] Even when Dirks says, " Under M.A.401 a) it states that for all maintenance only applicable current maintenance data (manuals) can be used. In addition under M.A.401(c) it states that the person or organisation maintaining an aircraft shall ensure that the applicable maintenance data is current." [emphasis mine] Dirks does not say that EASA says manuals have to updated every year. As I read what Dirks says about MA.401 a), a 30 year manual can be as considered current provided no safety issues or egregious errors have come up in the mean time. A 30 year old manual with a minor typo that does not effect safety is not an egregious error and EASA does not require the manual to be changed. Soooooooooo, when Weber says: "There is the necessity always to have the valid manuals available." He is correct. And when he says: "This necessity does not need an A/D (Airworthiness Directive), but it is defined in the rules of 'Part M'." He is correct. And when he says: "And there it is expressed absolutely clear." Guess what! He is correct! It is just that Weber's actions are not what is "expressed absolutely clear." As I read it, if anything is "expressed absolutely clear" in Dirks' comments, it is that EASA is not requiring ANY changes to the manuals. So Friedel, put THAT in your pipe and smoke it! |
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On Apr 1, 10:24*am, raulb wrote:
In the latest DG newsletter:http://www.dg-flugzeugbau.de/newsletter-138.html As I read Dirks' comments, Weber is full of crap. *I also think Weber shot himself in the foot by publishing Dirks' comments. As laid out by Dirks, the rules say "the latest version" of the manual has to be used. *He DOES NOT say that EASA requires it to be updated ever, much less every year. *Only that it be updated "if necessary," but if changes are made, then those manuals have to be made available and used. *The manuals need not be forced on people. Dirks says, " Under 21.A.57 it states that the TC holder shall update all manuals if necessary. Under 21.A.61 (b) it is stated that the TC must make the changes to the instructions of continued airworthiness (maintenance manuals) available to all known operators etc.." *[emphasis mine] Even when Dirks says, " Under M.A.401 a) it states that for all maintenance only applicable current maintenance data (manuals) can be used. In addition under M.A.401(c) it states that the person or organisation maintaining an aircraft shall ensure that the applicable maintenance data is current." [emphasis mine] Dirks does not say that EASA says manuals have to updated every year. As I read what Dirks says about MA.401 a), a 30 year manual can be as considered current provided no safety issues or egregious errors have come up in the mean time. *A 30 year old manual with a minor typo that does not effect safety is not an egregious error and EASA does not require the manual to be changed. Soooooooooo, when Weber says: "There is the necessity always to have the valid manuals available." He is correct. *And when he says: "This necessity does not need an A/D (Airworthiness Directive), but it is defined in the rules of *'Part M'." He is correct. *And when he says: "And there it is expressed absolutely clear." Guess what! *He is correct! *It is just that Weber's actions are not what is "expressed absolutely clear." *As I read it, if anything is "expressed absolutely clear" in Dirks' comments, it is that EASA is not requiring ANY changes to the manuals. So Friedel, put THAT in your pipe and smoke it! I spoke to a local FAA guy this weekend. In his opinion no one is required to pay for a yearly coversheet to remain legal. |
#3
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Raul -
Here's how I read Dirks' comments: He is not commenting on whether the manuals must be updated every year. He's saying that the law makes it clear: _If_ a manufacturer updates their manuals, the Owners/Operators and Maintenance personnel are required to ensure that they're using the updated manual. The law doesn't state that DG must over the revised manuals for free - just that they are required to be available. I think Dirks' comments are being used to tell pilots in the EU "don't ignore the fees from DG. If you refuse to buy updated manuals, you're flying illegally." As an extreme example: DG could come up with a new manual every week. They could charge 100 Euros per manual and require pilots to walk across a bed of hot coals at the DG factory before giving them the manual. And if a glider pilot/owner doesn't have the most recent manual (i.e. for that particular week) then they are not in compliance with the law - Period! Bottom-line: The way the laws are written (from what Dirks says), owners/pilots in the EU are hostages - they are at the mercy of the manufacturer. Any time the manufacturer revises the manuals, the owners/pilots/maintenance-personnel are _required_ to get them. The onus is on those people for having the proper manuals, no matter the cost. I love my DG-300; and boy am I glad that I am in the USA and that my glider has an Experimental certificate! ...But Weber's actions definitely have me re-thinking getting a DG-800 someday. ASW is looking more appealing all the time (all donations are gladly accepted)! :-P --Noel |
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On Apr 1, 12:34*pm, "noel.wade" wrote:
Raul - Here's how I read Dirks' comments: He is not commenting on whether the manuals must be updated every year. He's saying that the law makes it clear: *_If_ a manufacturer updates their manuals, the Owners/Operators and Maintenance personnel are required to ensure that they're using the updated manual. --Noel Did you miss this part? "Under 21.A.57 it states that the TC holder shall update all manuals if necessary" Who is going to judge whether these updates are "necessary"? I still can't believe that a manufacturer would be allowed to use such an arbitrary "loophole" as a money-making scheme. |
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On Apr 1, 10:43*am, Westbender wrote:
On Apr 1, 12:34*pm, "noel.wade" wrote: Did you miss this part? "Under 21.A.57 it states that the TC holder shall update all manuals if necessary" Who is going to judge whether these updates are "necessary"? I still can't believe that a manufacturer would be allowed to use such an arbitrary "loophole" as a money-making scheme. I agree, its total B.S. However, there is no definition of "necessary" in the laws that are currently written (at least, based on what he wrote - I am in the USA and don't have time to review the entire EU/EASA legal code). I don't think Weber is trying to get rich off of this. But I *do* suspect that he's been running his business at a loss, that he thinks its because of the older gliders, and that he can close the gap by employing this pay-for-manuals scheme. I happen to think he's wrong; but I'm not alone in that opinion. :-P ----- On a tangent - ----- Given that glider manufacturing is a pretty labor-intensive process, I wonder when the Chinese glider manufacturers are going to take off? For awhile it seemed that affordable new gliders were coming from Eastern Europe because of the depressed currencies and low labor costs; but economic developments in those areas have changed the equation. China is the logical "next place" for this activity, with an abundance of cheap labor and the ability to ship out a product globally. Some composite LSAs are now being built there and many radio-controlled gliders are as well. Its only a hop, a skip, and a jump from there to a Sailplane! The tough engineering work can be done separate from the glider manufacturing itself. Frankly, I'm surprised this isn't already happening (there may be a few limited examples of it already occurring; but why isn't it more wide-spread?) --Noel |
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On Apr 1, 11:33*am, "noel.wade" wrote:
On Apr 1, 10:43*am, Westbender wrote: On Apr 1, 12:34*pm, "noel.wade" wrote: Did you miss this part? "Under 21.A.57 it states that the TC holder shall update all manuals if necessary" Who is going to judge whether these updates are "necessary"? I still can't believe that a manufacturer would be allowed to use such an arbitrary "loophole" as a money-making scheme. I agree, its total B.S. *However, there is no definition of "necessary" in the laws that are currently written (at least, based on what he wrote - I am in the USA and don't have time to review the entire EU/EASA legal code). I don't think Weber is trying to get rich off of this. *But I *do* suspect that he's been running his business at a loss, that he thinks its because of the older gliders, and that he can close the gap by employing this pay-for-manuals scheme. *I happen to think he's wrong; but I'm not alone in that opinion. :-P ----- On a tangent - ----- Given that glider manufacturing is a pretty labor-intensive process, I wonder when the Chinese glider manufacturers are going to take off? For awhile it seemed that affordable new gliders were coming from Eastern Europe because of the depressed currencies and low labor costs; but economic developments in those areas have changed the equation. *China is the logical "next place" for this activity, with an abundance of cheap labor and the ability to ship out a product globally. *Some composite LSAs are now being built there and many radio-controlled gliders are as well. *Its only a hop, a skip, and a jump from there to a Sailplane! *The tough engineering work can be done separate from the glider manufacturing itself. *Frankly, I'm surprised this isn't already happening (there may be a few limited examples of it already occurring; but why isn't it more wide-spread?) --Noel I don't think China is going to be much intested in producing gliders because the market it so small. |
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On Apr 1, 12:52*pm, Grider Pirate wrote:
I don't think China is going to be much intested in producing gliders because the market it so small. I agree with you that I don't see any *glider-only* companies emerge. But there are companies in China that are already in the business of producing molded composites (R/C airplanes, LSAs, composite sub- assemblies for various industries, etc). A company in this business could build some gliders as a way to diversify their product offerings and fill gaps in their production schedules (for example, if an LSA manufacturer there isn't running at full capacity). Chinese labor statistics are hard to come by, but one BLS study in 2006 (http://www.allbusiness.com/manufacturing/4004559-1.html) pegged the aggregate labor rate at $0.67/hour. Even if that has tripled to around $2/hour, that's still a HUGE cost-savings over other labor markets. Sure, a bunch of your money is eaten up dealing with Chinese governmental issues, corruption, export law issues, shipping ,etc... But I bet it is still a cheaper solution overall. If its just a "part- time" operation for a manufacturer there who's already engaged in similar work (therefore having many of the tools and labor skills already at-hand), I would bet that you could set a good enough profit- margin for the manufacturer to make it worthwhile to produce 10 - 30 gliders per year; yet still represent a decent cost-savings over existing gliders. Whether the savings is ENOUGH to convince people to buy the glider is the big question. Its been tough for glider manufacturers to sell less-than-cutting-edge gliders (people seem to prefer to buy used equipment that's perceived as having top-notch performance); but the question is whether this issue is a result of the price difference not being big enough, or whether the market simply won't support a "non-competitive" new glider at any reasonable price. OK, enough rambling for now... [Can you guess who's taking a long lunch today?] --Noel |
#8
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![]() ----- On a tangent - ----- Given that glider manufacturing is a pretty labor-intensive process, I wonder when the Chinese glider manufacturers are going to take off? For awhile it seemed that affordable new gliders were coming from Eastern Europe because of the depressed currencies and low labor costs; but economic developments in those areas have changed the equation. *China is the logical "next place" for this activity, with an abundance of cheap labor and the ability to ship out a product globally. *Some composite LSAs are now being built there and many radio-controlled gliders are as well. *Its only a hop, a skip, and a jump from there to a Sailplane! *The tough engineering work can be done separate from the glider manufacturing itself. *Frankly, I'm surprised this isn't already happening (there may be a few limited examples of it already occurring; but why isn't it more wide-spread?) --Noel So far China has a reputation of making junk when it come so somewhat sophisticated items. Motorcycles come to mind. China has made "clones" of many of the Japanese motorcycles and scooters. They cost less, look good, but fall apart quickly. There is practically no way to get them to make good on warranty. Spare parts are hard to get too. If there were such a thing, I would think long and hard about buing a Chinese made glider. I wonder how Cessna will do with their Chinese airplane? For now I, when it comes to Chinese products, I will stick to Mardi Gras Beads....... |
#9
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On Apr 1, 5:30*pm, "
wrote: ...If there were such a thing, I would think long and hard about buing a Chinese made glider... The middle ground that suggests itself is to outsource the larger, more labor-intensive, components such as fuselage shells and wing skins. Then you could join them into major subassemblies (wings, fuselage) in an environment where their quality, and the quality of the overall assembly, can be inspected and vouched for. |
#10
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And China just bought Hummer and Volvo..
made cheaply and fall apart quickly... is in their future wrote in message ... ----- On a tangent - ----- Given that glider manufacturing is a pretty labor-intensive process, I wonder when the Chinese glider manufacturers are going to take off? For awhile it seemed that affordable new gliders were coming from Eastern Europe because of the depressed currencies and low labor costs; but economic developments in those areas have changed the equation. China is the logical "next place" for this activity, with an abundance of cheap labor and the ability to ship out a product globally. Some composite LSAs are now being built there and many radio-controlled gliders are as well. Its only a hop, a skip, and a jump from there to a Sailplane! The tough engineering work can be done separate from the glider manufacturing itself. Frankly, I'm surprised this isn't already happening (there may be a few limited examples of it already occurring; but why isn't it more wide-spread?) --Noel So far China has a reputation of making junk when it come so somewhat sophisticated items. Motorcycles come to mind. China has made "clones" of many of the Japanese motorcycles and scooters. They cost less, look good, but fall apart quickly. There is practically no way to get them to make good on warranty. Spare parts are hard to get too. If there were such a thing, I would think long and hard about buing a Chinese made glider. I wonder how Cessna will do with their Chinese airplane? For now I, when it comes to Chinese products, I will stick to Mardi Gras Beads....... |
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