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How many tandem Taylorcraft are still in service?

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  • Bob turner
    replied
    Aircraft is flying after six years down time - still with mechanical brakes. I actually flew it around the pattern in March - Yippee!

    Posting this so the site kind of remembers me - had a little difficulty with my password, but somehow the administrators fixed it. The site will tell me I cannot go there, then it takes me there.

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  • Bob turner
    replied
    Update: finally got the chief of the maintenance section to sign the field approval. 17 months. Perseverance pays off.

    The actual aircraft is assembled and licensed. Owner likes mechanical brakes, so it will be available for a future owner if I am still able to hold a wrench.

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  • Jerry Miel
    replied
    Hank,

    I would be glad to have the information and the spread sheet. I started to put my information in Word table, but only inputted the first couple of pages.

    Jerry

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  • Hank Jarrett
    replied
    Jerry, I have been doing much the same building a database of side by side planes. I can share the spreadsheet format I am using if you want so someday we can integrate teh two into a single spread of all Taylorcrafts. If I make a copy I could leave in all of the tandems I already have. When I stumble across one while looking for side by sides I usually add them to the database but no idea how many I have.

    Hank

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  • Jerry Miel
    replied
    I have a pretty complete list of Tandem Taylorcrafts that matches serial numbers, military numbers, and N numbers. This is NOT a listing of how many still exist, it is a listing of all of the records that the FAA had in their records in the late 1980's. I spent many days at the FAA in OK City back then when you could get access. They gave me access to their file card cabinet and let me copy all of the 3 by 5 cards that they had, most of them hand written. I am willing to share the information with anyone who has a question. They are still just pages of hand written notes, so it is not an easy thing to share the whole list.

    Jerry Miel, 520-370-7258

    Leave a comment:


  • Ragwing nut
    replied
    Originally posted by Bigdog View Post

    One of my four is the first YO-57. Do you know if the other two still exist?
    I thought you had 2 YO's. I have never looked to see if they were still around.

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  • Bigdog
    replied
    Originally posted by Ragwing nut View Post

    you need my Yo-57 so you can have the complete set. lol.
    One of my four is the first YO-57. Do you know if the other two still exist?

    Leave a comment:


  • Bob turner
    replied
    Wow! I appreciate the input! This is useful information for me.

    To keep you up to date, today I heard indirectly from the FAA on my field approval application. The inspector having the most contact with my submission says that there is an STC for the very thing I am proposing. Since my application is now 15 months old, I can only assume that the STC was granted very recently. Neither Robbie nor I are aware of such an approval.

    Who would spend the $ and effort to get an STC for 50 birds, knowing that not all owners would spring for the five or six grand just for parts?

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  • Ragwing nut
    replied
    Originally posted by Bigdog View Post

    As a data point, I've got 4 of the 262 and none are flying. They are all complete projects with logs. They are my retirement projects so if I live long enough they will get back in the air.
    you need my Yo-57 so you can have the complete set. lol.

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  • Bigdog
    replied
    Originally posted by NC36061 View Post
    There are 262 DCs and L2s currently registered if I counted right. I would bet not more than 50 or 20% of those are actually airworthy airplanes. A lot of them are probably nothing more than a data plate and maybe some logs.
    As a data point, I've got 4 of the 262 and none are flying. They are all complete projects with logs. They are my retirement projects so if I live long enough they will get back in the air.

    Leave a comment:


  • NC36061
    replied
    There are 262 DCs and L2s currently registered if I counted right. I would bet not more than 50 or 20% of those are actually airworthy airplanes. A lot of them are probably nothing more than a data plate and maybe some logs.

    Leave a comment:


  • 3Dreaming
    replied
    Originally posted by Bob turner View Post
    The owner just let me fly his sided-by-side Lycoming powered Taylorcraft - a "first" for me; I had never flown a side by side T-cart. He said the brakes were perfect! Yeah, right. I had to plan ahead to stop.
    These things are just not up to busy GA airports. It was a delight to fly, and landed like a Cub.
    Was the BL 29815?

    Leave a comment:


  • Hank Jarrett
    replied
    If you have to plan ahead to stop, the brakes ARE perfect! Trying to stop using brakes at any landing speed in a Taylorcraft is a great way to learn to taxi inverted.

    Hank

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  • Bob turner
    replied
    I got an almost identical 337 - the sort of thing the FAA calls "acceptable data." Still no response. Fortunately, the owner will never spring for the parts, so this is a theoretical exercise.

    The owner just let me fly his sided-by-side Lycoming powered Taylorcraft - a "first" for me; I had never flown a side by side T-cart. He said the brakes were perfect! Yeah, right. I had to plan ahead to stop.
    These things are just not up to busy GA airports. It was a delight to fly, and landed like a Cub.

    Leave a comment:


  • Bob turner
    replied
    My FSDO apparently started assigning these things on a rotating basis. One guy is very helpful; another is often impossible. The head guy has approved similar applications, so I expect that sometime around the one year mark I will get something done. I will check in on Friday, and every month thereafter, to see how they are doing.

    Leave a comment:

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