Re: WSplit Cowl
Well while we are on the subject: As a newbie pilot I found rags and wrenches left on top of C150 engines after inspection. Once the flasher unit was hanging out the side of a 150 by it's wires.
First Taylorcraft I bought was signed off by the sellers IA friend. I didn't know doodly about airplanes yet. The rib stitching was rotten cotton. A bolt on one of the control arms (behind the seat?) didn't have a nut on it. Some of the ribs had chunks of plywood as leading edge parts. Oh yeah, sealer on the carb gasket put me in a pickle weed field one day with a unresponsive engine.
Second Taylorcraft was in great shape but needed a cleanup on moisture damage to a cylinder so the inspector/mechanic took it off by bending all the nice new baffles, practically ruining them.
Next my straight-tailed 172, just recently signed off, had so much corrosion on the overlapped sheet metal over the horizontal stabilizer spar that the area was pretty much brown powder. Pulled up on the stabilizer one day--pop, clunk--OH, OH!
Next Taylorcraft (present one): Owned by Father, Son, both Inspectors before sold to me. Ailerons would not fair in flight completely because cables were too tight. Lower elevator cable hanging down way too low. Trim tab cable so tight that it caused elevator binding. Electrical switch inside battery case (hydrogen). The real biggie: the gascolator was hooked up backwards so any garbage that came into it would be deposited on top of the screen eventually obstructing fuel flow.There was more, but you get the idea.
Sooo--perhaps you can understand what my attitude is about aircraft maintenance and safety. I work with the guys that sign off the airplane so they know everything I have done, but I do it myself.
Darryl
Well while we are on the subject: As a newbie pilot I found rags and wrenches left on top of C150 engines after inspection. Once the flasher unit was hanging out the side of a 150 by it's wires.
First Taylorcraft I bought was signed off by the sellers IA friend. I didn't know doodly about airplanes yet. The rib stitching was rotten cotton. A bolt on one of the control arms (behind the seat?) didn't have a nut on it. Some of the ribs had chunks of plywood as leading edge parts. Oh yeah, sealer on the carb gasket put me in a pickle weed field one day with a unresponsive engine.
Second Taylorcraft was in great shape but needed a cleanup on moisture damage to a cylinder so the inspector/mechanic took it off by bending all the nice new baffles, practically ruining them.
Next my straight-tailed 172, just recently signed off, had so much corrosion on the overlapped sheet metal over the horizontal stabilizer spar that the area was pretty much brown powder. Pulled up on the stabilizer one day--pop, clunk--OH, OH!
Next Taylorcraft (present one): Owned by Father, Son, both Inspectors before sold to me. Ailerons would not fair in flight completely because cables were too tight. Lower elevator cable hanging down way too low. Trim tab cable so tight that it caused elevator binding. Electrical switch inside battery case (hydrogen). The real biggie: the gascolator was hooked up backwards so any garbage that came into it would be deposited on top of the screen eventually obstructing fuel flow.There was more, but you get the idea.
Sooo--perhaps you can understand what my attitude is about aircraft maintenance and safety. I work with the guys that sign off the airplane so they know everything I have done, but I do it myself.
Darryl
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