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#1
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Newcomer to group and ownership here. Hope this isn't an FAQ, but Googling
the keywords brings up too many hits that don't address my question. I'm looking at a fairly typical first plane to buy ... 1960s Cherokee ... that appears to be just right. It has reasonable airframe time and low engine time. It was annualled two months ago. My specific question is ... Since the plane was just annualled, what should I look for in my (free, amatuer) pre-buy and ask the mechanic too look for in the professional inspection, that would indicate a "don't buy" decision, even if the annual is fresh. I'm thinking about things like interior wing corrosion that are airworthy this year and probably next, but would make the plane a poor long-term investment. Is this the right question to ask? Experienced, non-monetarily motivated answers appreciated. |
#2
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That is the right question to ask. What you are looking for are
deal-breakers, not routine maintenance items that have popped up in the two months since the annual. Corrosion, un-logged damage history, weak cylinders, cracked engine case, inop accessories, nonconformance with the type certificate, missing logs, are the types of deal-breakers that should be looked for in a pre-buy. "Douglas Olson" wrote in message ink.net... Newcomer to group and ownership here. Hope this isn't an FAQ, but Googling the keywords brings up too many hits that don't address my question. I'm looking at a fairly typical first plane to buy ... 1960s Cherokee ... that appears to be just right. It has reasonable airframe time and low engine time. It was annualled two months ago. My specific question is ... Since the plane was just annualled, what should I look for in my (free, amatuer) pre-buy and ask the mechanic too look for in the professional inspection, that would indicate a "don't buy" decision, even if the annual is fresh. I'm thinking about things like interior wing corrosion that are airworthy this year and probably next, but would make the plane a poor long-term investment. Is this the right question to ask? Experienced, non-monetarily motivated answers appreciated. |
#3
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Doug,
Be careful about the overhaul. Low time is not always good. I looked at one airplane that had only 600SMOH but the overhaul had been done 25 years earlier. Not only is that bad in terms of low annual usuage, it's also way beyond Lycoming's recommendation of 12 years between overhauls. Most sellers and brokers I spoke to refused to consider anything but engine hours in terms of valuing the engine but calender time is significant. There are many aircraft for sale that are within the manufacturer's recommendations regarding hours but way beyond the 12 year recommendation. Have an experienced mechanic check the engine thoroughly. Get an oil sample to a lab and the screen and/or filter inspected. If possible, try to make sure the engine has at least 10 or 20 hours since the last oil change. Dave 68 7ECA Douglas Olson wrote: Newcomer to group and ownership here. Hope this isn't an FAQ, but Googling the keywords brings up too many hits that don't address my question. I'm looking at a fairly typical first plane to buy ... 1960s Cherokee ... that appears to be just right. It has reasonable airframe time and low engine time. It was annualled two months ago. My specific question is ... Since the plane was just annualled, what should I look for in my (free, amatuer) pre-buy and ask the mechanic too look for in the professional inspection, that would indicate a "don't buy" decision, even if the annual is fresh. I'm thinking about things like interior wing corrosion that are airworthy this year and probably next, but would make the plane a poor long-term investment. Is this the right question to ask? Experienced, non-monetarily motivated answers appreciated. |
#4
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Your mechanic should give it a compression test, look for AD's, cut the
oil filter, sample the oil, look for corrosion. You should be able to check the paint, upholstry, cleanliness, avionics and flight characteristics. As for old engines, even with low engine time, don't expect an old engine (over 12 years) to make it to TBO. Frequently flown is MUCH better. Frequently flown engines make it PAST TBO (frequent being over 100 hours a year, spread out through out the year). |
#5
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Well, you could do anything from nothing to another annual. How well do you
trust the shop that did the annual? If the plane is for sale now then you can be almost certain that the minimal amount of work was done at the annual. As always you have to weigh the amount to spend on the inspection against what will be found that the seller will be willing to repair. Mike MU-2 "Douglas Olson" wrote in message ink.net... Newcomer to group and ownership here. Hope this isn't an FAQ, but Googling the keywords brings up too many hits that don't address my question. I'm looking at a fairly typical first plane to buy ... 1960s Cherokee ... that appears to be just right. It has reasonable airframe time and low engine time. It was annualled two months ago. My specific question is ... Since the plane was just annualled, what should I look for in my (free, amatuer) pre-buy and ask the mechanic too look for in the professional inspection, that would indicate a "don't buy" decision, even if the annual is fresh. I'm thinking about things like interior wing corrosion that are airworthy this year and probably next, but would make the plane a poor long-term investment. Is this the right question to ask? Experienced, non-monetarily motivated answers appreciated. |
#6
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I disagree with what has been said here, except Mike. The pre-buy should be
another annual inspection, with great emphasis on known problems with the model of aircraft you want to buy. If it was annualled two months ago with the intention to buy, _assume_ that corners were cut. Remember, you _will_ be stuck with whatever you don't find in the pre-buy. "Douglas Olson" wrote in message ink.net... Newcomer to group and ownership here. Hope this isn't an FAQ, but Googling the keywords brings up too many hits that don't address my question. I'm looking at a fairly typical first plane to buy ... 1960s Cherokee ... that appears to be just right. It has reasonable airframe time and low engine time. It was annualled two months ago. My specific question is ... Since the plane was just annualled, what should I look for in my (free, amatuer) pre-buy and ask the mechanic too look for in the professional inspection, that would indicate a "don't buy" decision, even if the annual is fresh. I'm thinking about things like interior wing corrosion that are airworthy this year and probably next, but would make the plane a poor long-term investment. Is this the right question to ask? Experienced, non-monetarily motivated answers appreciated. |
#7
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Hi Doug. Great question. I'm a new owner and went through a similar
experience. We bought an Arrow that had literally come out of annual a couple of days before we showed up to take a look (and hopefully close the deal and fly home...which we wound up doing). I poked around for info. on the shop that had been doing the maintenance and received positive reports (thanks again Blanche). We also asked tons of questions to the owner and to the A&P that had been maintaining the plane. We went through AOPA for the title search and copies of past paperwork. Everything looked fine so we put down a deposit and headed to Denver. I spend a couple hours with the A&P reviewing the logs and asking more questions. I also had a chance to fly the plane as well. Reviewing the logs, we just kept finding more information that the plane had been well maintained. The A&P let me do whatever I wanted in terms of poking around the plane. The next day, one partner along with an instructor showed up. They had a look at the plane and we closed the deal then flew home. So, our pre-buy inspection was very limited. We could have (and many would say "should have") had a different shop do some form of pre-buy inspection. Given how the entire deal was progressing and our overall timeframe, we opted not to take the plane to another shop. A definite risk but one that we were comfortable with given all of the information we had. Specifically on your situation, check into whether or not Piper service bulletin 1006 has been performed. This is the one where they pull the tanks and check for corrosion on the wing spar caps. Many Piper owners advised me this is a "must have". If it has not been performed, I feel it is worth spending the money to do as part of a pre-buy inspection. Good luck with the purchase process. Be prepared to walk away if something doesn't feel right. We had to walk away from two deals before we found our Arrow. Not fun, time consuming, etc...but worth it in the end. -- Jack Allison PP-ASEL-IA Student Arrow N2104T "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 (Remove the obvious from address to reply via e-mail) |
#8
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Quite a few mechanics and quite a few shops tend to shy away from the
"pre-buy" inspection for one main reason. There are a gazillion items that can be inspected to a fare-thee-well and wind up being unairworthy next week. Then you come back to me and ask me why I didn't find this glaring problem on the pre-buy and expect me to fix it for free. Example -- on July 20th last year I did an annual on a 182. I found a couple of minor things wrong, fixed them, and signed off the annual. Two weeks later that aircraft split a cylinder in two in flight and had to make a forced landing in a cow pasture. Now the question becomes -- how could I have detected this fault by inspection? Perhaps if I had removed all the cylinders and taken them down to be nondestructively tested (mag particle, zyglo, etc.) we might have spotted that incipient crack. We might not have. But that's not reality. Pulling the jugs on every annual (and removing the wings to inspect for corrosion, taking out all the radios to run a bench specifications test, and all that stuff) just isn't the real world. I won't take a pre-buy job except for a good friend and even at that we have to have the understanding that (s)he is going to be standing right at my side during the entire process and watch everything that I look at. Six months later when the veeblefeltzer snaps a rittit both (s)he and I looked at the damned thing and agreed that it looked normal. That and I charge double for a prebuy what I charge for an annual. Jim " My specific question is ... Since the plane was just annualled, what should I look for in my (free, amatuer) pre-buy and ask the mechanic too look for in the professional inspection, that would indicate a "don't buy" decision, even if the annual is fresh. |
#9
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Well, thank you for a mechanic's perspective on this.
Seeing as every piece of "how to buy a used airplane" literature recommends a mechanic's pre-buy, what do consider a real-world way for the amatuer to avoid the big money pits like wing spar problems? "RST Engineering" wrote in message ... Quite a few mechanics and quite a few shops tend to shy away from the "pre-buy" inspection for one main reason. There are a gazillion items that can be inspected to a fare-thee-well and wind up being unairworthy next week. Then you come back to me and ask me why I didn't find this glaring problem on the pre-buy and expect me to fix it for free. I won't take a pre-buy job except for a good friend and even at that we have to have the understanding that (s)he is going to be standing right at my side during the entire process and watch everything that I look at. Six months later when the veeblefeltzer snaps a rittit both (s)he and I looked at the damned thing and agreed that it looked normal. That and I charge double for a prebuy what I charge for an annual. |
#10
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Wing spars are fairly accessable and moderately easy to inspect thoroughly.
It is the stuff that you can't get inside to see without ripping the airplane completely apart that generally rise up and bite you. How do you detect that an oil pump gear has a hairline fracture and is about to self-destruct without pulling the back end of the engine apart? How do you tell that a bladder cell is about to start leaking from an invisible internal split in the cell wall? The stuff you can see is generally not the problem ... but in the case of an invisible crack in a cylinder wall it was. The answer is that there is no good answer except for a record of preventive maintenance. Jim "Douglas Olson" wrote in message ink.net... Well, thank you for a mechanic's perspective on this. Seeing as every piece of "how to buy a used airplane" literature recommends a mechanic's pre-buy, what do consider a real-world way for the amatuer to avoid the big money pits like wing spar problems? |
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