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#1
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Heres your Valentines day card from the FAA.
DG AD Note. http://www.aero-news.net/index.cfm?C...-fde8ab90326c& |
#2
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pbc76049 wrote:
Heres your Valentines day card from the FAA. DG AD Note. http://www.aero-news.net/index.cfm?C...-fde8ab90326c& DG owners, the corresponding technical note has been out for well over a year, applying to all DG-100, 200, 300, 400, 600, and early production 500 models. Look for a TN with subject "Lower mounting of rudder" for your model... Marc |
#3
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Please help with my education. Is a German TN the same as a German AD or is
it not the same thing. Are they equivalent? -- Hartley Falbaum "Marc Ramsey" wrote in message ... pbc76049 wrote: Heres your Valentines day card from the FAA. DG AD Note. http://www.aero-news.net/index.cfm?C...-fde8ab90326c& DG owners, the corresponding technical note has been out for well over a year, applying to all DG-100, 200, 300, 400, 600, and early production 500 models. Look for a TN with subject "Lower mounting of rudder" for your model... Marc |
#4
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HL Falbaum wrote:
Please help with my education. Is a German TN the same as a German AD or is it not the same thing. Are they equivalent? Well, a Technical Note of this sort is approved by the LBA (and/or EASA, these days) and becomes a part of the aircraft type certificate. So yes, I guess it is sort of a German AD. For those of us who have Special Airworthiness Certificates in the US, the operating limitations almost always state that the aircraft must be maintained in compliance with all technical notes and service bulletins, so effectively they are equivalent to an AD for US experimental aircraft. The German technical notes that apply to certified aircraft wend their way through the various bureaucracies, and become a real US AD within a year or so. In any case, if I had a certified DG, and a technical note like this came out, I wouldn't wait for the US AD... I know the guy who had the rudder fall off. It was during the landing roll out, so it wasn't a big problem, but still rather disturbing to consider what would have happened if it had fallen off a few moments earlier... Marc |
#5
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"HL Falbaum" wrote in message
... Please help with my education. Is a German TN the same as a German AD or is it not the same thing. Are they equivalent? -- Hartley Falbaum A TN is roughly equivalent to a service bulletin. A manufacturer recommended action. An AD note is a required action. |
#6
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![]() Yes this should be old news to DG owners. I received the FAA notice months ago and thought it pretty amusing since I'd been aware of this since late 2004 (the glider I brought already had the fix installed). It is not hard to look on the DG web site. I see having to do this as pretty much a reasonable expectation for an owner. The other TN that amused me from the lack of awarness of it amongst owners was the DG-300 undercarriage handle mod (ftp://dgflugzeugbau.de/tn/dg-300/dg-300elan/359-22/). This is a spring that helps hold the undercarriage handle in it's locked down detent. When I was buying my DG-303 I asked people who were selling there glider and other DG-303 owners if they had installed this mod. About half the time I got a yes and about half the time I got blank look. The best discussion went "what mod..." ... "oh that exactly happened to me and my undercarrige collapsed". Ditto for the DG-300/303 Roeger hook installation (ftp://dgflugzeugbau.de/tn/dg-300/dg-300elan/359-19) , I'm not sure all the gliders who could do with this mod have it installed. Like it only took a pilot getting killed to create this mod, how many older gliders are flying around without a Roeger hook on the canopy? Darryl Marc Ramsey wrote: pbc76049 wrote: Heres your Valentines day card from the FAA. DG AD Note. http://www.aero-news.net/index.cfm?C...-fde8ab90326c& DG owners, the corresponding technical note has been out for well over a year, applying to all DG-100, 200, 300, 400, 600, and early production 500 models. Look for a TN with subject "Lower mounting of rudder" for your model... Marc |
#7
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John DG-300 "XLT" |
#8
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Gadget Guy wrote:
pbc76049 Wrote: Heres your Valentines day card from the FAA. DG AD Note. http://tinyurl.com/7qnn8 Just noticed that the FAA does not mention anything about the DG-300. It is on the DG website. It has been there for a while. The only models that will be mentioned in an AD are those that have a standard type certificate in the US. The DG-300 doesn't have one... Marc |
#9
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I find it amazing and amusing how far apart common sense and
bureaucracy are, even and especially in life threatening situation. Common sense is to immediately notify all owners and make it required to fix anything that failed and killed or could kill someone (such as the rudder AD). FAA bureaucracy however, find it much more important to deal with certificates, paperworks, regulations and fine prints (such as the latest Pegasus AD - let's ground all pegasus due to documentation clarity...). Ramy |
#10
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My understanding is that and AD is issued by the airworthiness
authority (e.g. the LBA) and the corresponding TN by the manufacturer to formally describe what needs to be done and why. Then there might be an appendix issued by the manufacturer with the real gen about how to do it. A typical example that affected myself was the Duo spar problem. See Technical Note No. 890-3 and AD No. 2003-245-2 at: http://www.schempp-hirth.com/en/serv...lungen/index.h tml But to confuse things the German LBA for AD seems to be LTA and for TN read TM:-) And there are also many manufacturer TNs without an LBA AD (LTA) having been issued - sometimes for optional modifications. At 21:12 14 February 2006, Marc Ramsey wrote: HL Falbaum wrote: Please help with my education. Is a German TN the same as a German AD or is it not the same thing. Are they equivalent? Well, a Technical Note of this sort is approved by the LBA (and/or EASA, these days) and becomes a part of the aircraft type certificate. So yes, I guess it is sort of a German AD. For those of us who have Special Airworthiness Certificates in the US, the operating limitations almost always state that the aircraft must be maintained in compliance with all technical notes and service bulletins, so effectively they are equivalent to an AD for US experimental aircraft. The German technical notes that apply to certified aircraft wend their way through the various bureaucracies, and become a real US AD within a year or so. In any case, if I had a certified DG, and a technical note like this came out, I wouldn't wait for the US AD... I know the guy who had the rudder fall off. It was during the landing roll out, so it wasn't a big problem, but still rather disturbing to consider what would have happened if it had fallen off a few moments earlier... Marc |
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