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A few weeks ago, I acquired the "collective usenet wisdom" on whether or not moveable control surfaces are repairable. The
answer I received was that "It depends on whether or not the service manual allows it." As an example, I looked through a Piper Cherokee service manual which said that the control surfaces must stay within the balance limits after "painting or repairs." Sounded feasible, especially since the book also said that the factory tries to leave the counterweight at the heavy end of the allowable range to allow for painting and repairs. After discussing this with my A&P/IA friend, he said he was told by a New Piper Aircraft rep that the official word is that the official stance is that now control surface are NOT repairable. He went further to say that the IA was bound to adhere to this, now that he knew. OK... so the question NOW is, which one is correct? The written word of Piper Service manual, or the verbal communication of the currect stance. Is there any *WRITTEN* documentation of this change of policy? Curiously, -Cory -- ************************************************** *********************** * Cory Papenfuss, Ph.D., PPSEL-IA * * Electrical Engineering * * Virginia Polytechnic Institute and State University * ************************************************** *********************** |
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#3
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#4
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Ya need new friends... Your IA friend is CYA (not necessarily a wrong
posture, but certianly not courageous)... The factory is perfectly happy to take such a stance because they will sell high profit replacement parts... Every FSDO manager in the country is praying that no one drops this dispute on 'his' desk, threatening his retirement... In a lifetime of banging around airplanes I have seen repaired, rebuilt, even to the point of literally being brand new, controls surfaces inspected and signed off as an acceptable field repair... Now maybe an IA that New Piper has on record of having told he must replace with new might feel constrained... But any active IA, who actually drives rivets and overhauls magnetos, etc., will likely not blink at signing off on a competent repair... The word is competent... cheers ... denny Michelle P wrote: wrote: After discussing this with my A&P/IA friend, he said he was told by a New Piper Aircraft rep that the official word is that the official stance is that now control surface are NOT repairable. He went further to say that the IA was bound to adhere to this, now that he knew. |
#5
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I take issue with what the Piper guy told the A&P shame on him or her
its just flat wrong. The bottom line is the Federal Aviation Rules (FAR). The FAR are public law under Title 49 and in Title 49, part 43, Section 43.13(a) it states: Each person performing maintenance, alteration, or preventive maintenance on an aircraft, engine, propeller, or appliance shall use the methods, techniques, and practices prescribed in the current manufacturer's maintenance manual or Instructions for Continued Airworthiness prepared by its manufacturer, or other methods, techniques, and practices acceptable to the Administrator, except as noted in §43.16. What this means is the person who repairs or maintains an aircraft MUST follow the current maintenance manual period. If something is not in the manual you cannot do it unless approved by the FAA Administrator. If a Piper representative says you cannot do something they are wrong unless it so states it in the maintenance manual. If the repair manual shows a repair for the control surfaces which it does the mechanic can perform it because Section 43.13(a) says so (it the law). Sorry but Piper is all wet on this issue if they did state such a thing. I would bet the Piper Company would not put it in writing and give it to your mechanic would they? Stache |
#6
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Stache wrote:
: The bottom line is the Federal Aviation Rules (FAR). The FAR are : public law under Title 49 and in Title 49, part 43, Section 43.13(a) it : states: Each person performing maintenance, alteration, or preventive : maintenance on an aircraft, engine, propeller, or appliance shall use : the methods, techniques, and practices prescribed in the current : manufacturer's maintenance manual or Instructions for Continued : Airworthiness prepared by its manufacturer, or other methods, : techniques, and practices acceptable to the Administrator, except as : noted in ??43.16. : What this means is the person who repairs or maintains an aircraft MUST : follow the current maintenance manual period. If something is not in : the manual you cannot do it unless approved by the FAA Administrator. : If a Piper representative says you cannot do something they are wrong : unless it so states it in the maintenance manual. If the repair manual : shows a repair for the control surfaces which it does the mechanic can : perform it because Section 43.13(a) says so (it the law). : Sorry but Piper is all wet on this issue if they did state such a : thing. I would bet the Piper Company would not put it in writing and : give it to your mechanic would they? : Stache I don't know that my mechanic asked to get it in writing. Now that you mention it, that's an interesting way to go about it. If Piper maintains this position "on the record," that means that their maintenance manual must be revised to be in-line. I do not fault my IA for his position. He's very good being on the flexible side of allowable interpretations for my benefit. When it's a judegment call, he and I make it together WRT my airplane. I'm sure the reason he's hard-nosed about this one is because the factory rep spewed the lawyer-eese CYA approach. -Cory -- ************************************************** *********************** * Cory Papenfuss, Ph.D., PPSEL-IA * * Electrical Engineering * * Virginia Polytechnic Institute and State University * ************************************************** *********************** |
#8
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