Greetings,
I am looking at a BLS-12-65 that was "converted" (I'm not certain what that entails) from an L-2 in 1946. O-145-B2, no electrics...
Q1: The FAA site shows the current revision (5) of A-700 from 1969. (Is this correct? If so it might explain my next question.)
Q2: The ancient Weight and Balance shows an empty weight of 637 pounds which seems low. BUT, there is also list of 212 pounds of equipment that pushes this to 849 pounds combined. I have never seen such an extensive list, the doors, upholstery, basic instruments, fuel system, (I assume anti-)corrosion treatment, each have weights and datum points. As well as what I think of as being more normal items like the prop, extra mag on the A2, floats... Was this normal practice back then. (Or, maybe because it was stripped of military gear, reweighed, and then civilianized?)
The availability of O-145 parts, and the 429 pound useful weight limit are understood.
Thank you
Lisa
I am looking at a BLS-12-65 that was "converted" (I'm not certain what that entails) from an L-2 in 1946. O-145-B2, no electrics...
Q1: The FAA site shows the current revision (5) of A-700 from 1969. (Is this correct? If so it might explain my next question.)
Q2: The ancient Weight and Balance shows an empty weight of 637 pounds which seems low. BUT, there is also list of 212 pounds of equipment that pushes this to 849 pounds combined. I have never seen such an extensive list, the doors, upholstery, basic instruments, fuel system, (I assume anti-)corrosion treatment, each have weights and datum points. As well as what I think of as being more normal items like the prop, extra mag on the A2, floats... Was this normal practice back then. (Or, maybe because it was stripped of military gear, reweighed, and then civilianized?)
The availability of O-145 parts, and the 429 pound useful weight limit are understood.
Thank you
Lisa
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