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News from the Factory III

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  • Re: News from the Factory III

    Read the posts, the Brownsville Herald keeps up on all. THEY ( the City) appear to be giving Mr. Ingram one more chance. It was agreed by council to accept a partial payment and all is well!

    The FAA was in two weeks ago looking at all the evidence on the alledged strut failures. maybe we should keep this thread on target.
    Taylorcraft Foundation, Inc
    Forrest A Barber 330-495-5447
    TF#1
    www.BarberAircraft.com
    [email protected]

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    • Re: News from the Factory III

      It may be time to start yet another one and let this one wither.
      1946 BC-12D N96016
      I have known today a magnificent intoxication. I have learnt how it feels to be a bird. I have flown. Yes I have flown. I am still astonished at it, still deeply moved. — Le Figaro, 1908

      Comment


      • Re: News from the Factory III

        Alleged strut failures?

        I don't think we need to "nip this in the bud", I think we need to take a baseball bat and bash it to death before it sprouts into a bud.

        Seriously... a petition to the FAA engineering branch and legal branch signed by some number of experienced Taylorcraft mechanics that says there is no known service difficulty with the T-craft struts, no abnormal incidence of failures inflight or on inspection, and that it has come to be known that some individuals have been discussing a strut AD as a revenue generating scheme rather than a safety issue. The FAA is all about the avoidance of liability these days, so it should not be difficult to point out that participating in this potentially fraudulent scheme would put the FAA in harm's way.

        And a letter to whom it may concern that if there was an AD issued on Monday there would be an alternate method of compliance filed on Tuesday that did not result in any cash for whom it may concern.
        Taylorcraft : Making Better Aviators for 75 Years... and Counting

        Bill Berle
        TF#693

        http://www.ezflaphandle.com
        http://www.grantstar.net
        N26451 (1940 BL(C)-65) 1988-90
        N47DN (Auster Autocrat) 1992-93
        N96121 (1946 BC-12D-85) 1998-99
        N29544 (1940 BL(C)-85) 2005-08

        Comment


        • Re: News from the Factory III

          Kind of look for something at next inspection and if found, replace within the next 10,000 hours ?
          1946 BC-12D N96016
          I have known today a magnificent intoxication. I have learnt how it feels to be a bird. I have flown. Yes I have flown. I am still astonished at it, still deeply moved. — Le Figaro, 1908

          Comment


          • Re: News from the Factory III

            Boarding up more than 20 percent at airport
            By CHRIS MAHON
            The Brownsville Herald

            December 14, 2006 — Boardings are up 20.76 percent at the Brownsville-South Padre Island International Airport so far this year.

            That’s a total of 151,307 residents, tourists, businessmen and other travelers who have passed through the facility since January, Airport Advisory Board members were told Tuesday.

            But potentially bad financial news was absent for the second month in a row.

            Airport Director Larry Brown said he would provide statements of revenues and expenditures at the taxpayer-funded airport at the January meeting. From then on, he said, the airport would only disclose its financial health quarterly, instead of monthly “for the ease of bookkeeping and (because of) the amount of work going on.”

            Figures from November show that back rent and other bills owed to the airport totaled $281,436.39.

            Since the City Commission recently voted to let Taylorcraft Aviation LLC stay at the airport and that company paid its rent this month for the first time in nearly a year and a half, that amount could remain the same.

            However, because the airport did not calculate its current losses this month, it is impossible to know if the amount of uncollected debt is growing or decreasing.

            Comment


            • Re: News from the Factory III

              Has anyone been able to get on the Taylorcraft factory website recently. . . .might be my PC but it seems it is gone.
              Eric Minnis
              Bully Aeroplane Works and Airshows
              www.bullyaero.com
              Clipwing Tcraft x3


              Flying is easy- to go up you pull back, to go down you pull back a little farther.

              Comment


              • Re: News from the Factory III

                When I asked Diana about the web site a couple of weeks ago she said that they were having server problems and it was being worked on. Of more concern is the fact that their phone has been "temporarily" disconnected. I called the Brownsville Herold and talked to Chris who covers airport stuff and he was not aware of any new information about Taylorcraft.
                Tom Butler
                TF #743
                ex F21 N2005U
                F22 N2202T

                Comment


                • Re: News from the Factory III

                  FYI Everyone

                  Tom Gilbertson
                  Cranford, NJ
                  '46 BC-12-D
                  N95716

                  Comment


                  • Re: News from the Factory III

                    The FAA was "in" where looking into alleged strut failures? In Brownsville, at Barber's? Is it definite that Harry has alleged that strut failures were occuring? Doesn't someone know more about this? How do you know, Forrest, that the FAA is looking into alleged strut failures?

                    Ed@BTV VT
                    TF 527

                    Comment


                    • Re: News from the Factory III

                      Here's the write-up from Aero-News:


                      Taylorcraft Aviation HQ Chained Shut
                      Mon, 22 Jan '07

                      Company's $15K Rent Check Bounces
                      It appears it's all over for Taylorcraft Aviation, which at one time intended to reintroduce the venerable two-seat high-wing aircraft to the light-sport segment.

                      The Brownsville (TX) Herald reports the city has chained the doors at Taylorcraft's facility at Brownsville Airport, after the company apparently passed a hot check to the city for back rent.

                      "As far as I’m concerned, our relationship is over with," said City Manager Charlie Cabler. The Herald reports that check -- for $15,000, or one-month's rent -- did not make a dent in the more than $100,000 the company owes in back rent. A check from Taylorcraft in December, also for $15,000, cleared.

                      Cabler says the city is now considering legal action against Taylorcraft, and company president Harry Ingram.

                      Problems for Taylorcraft had been on the horizon for some time. As Aero-News reported in September, Ingram was hit with over a quarter million dollars in judgments and liens. The company lost its corporate charter in 2004 because of a tax lien, so Ingram may be personally liable for the debt.

                      Things appeared a bit brighter in mid-2005, when Brownsville officials lured the planemaker to the city... but that didn't last for long. An investigation by the Herald soon revealed the city didn't perform a background check on the company -- and worse, Ingram's company was not licensed by the FAA to manufacture either parts or aircraft under the Taylorcraft type-certificate.

                      The struggling aircraft manufacturer filed for Chapter 11 bankruptcy on October 13, 2006. As recently as last November, a majority of Brownsville City Commission officials voted to allow the company to stick it out... if it promised once again to start paying rent. Brownsville Mayor Eddie Treviño Jr. was among those who backed the plan.

                      Those opposed to granting Taylorcraft that one last reprieve say those who supported Taylorcraft have some explaining to do.

                      "Anybody that voted to keep them, knowing their past history and all that we learned ... they should be held accountable. They should feel responsible," Commissioner Charlie Atkinson said after news of the bounced rent check.

                      Whatever the legal situation... it is sad to see yet another storied nameplate fade away. The basic Taylorcraft aircraft first flew in 1936.

                      Comment


                      • Re: News from the Factory III

                        crap them basterds but then again now is the chance to build it back up with better people and i tell you what if i had the money id do it in a heart beat tcrafts are beautifull aircraft perfect for sport planes in fact ill ask around maybe i can do something about it i think thats what aviation need the good ol days pre ww2 when the records fell just as soon as the were put up and when aircraft were cheap

                        Comment


                        • Re: News from the Factory III

                          Originally posted by tim View Post
                          crap them basterds but then again now is the chance to build it back up with better people and i tell you what if i had the money id do it in a heart beat tcrafts are beautifull aircraft perfect for sport planes in fact ill ask around maybe i can do something about it i think thats what aviation need the good ol days pre ww2 when the records fell just as soon as the were put up and when aircraft were cheap
                          I don't know why everyone wants to see new taylorcrafts made again. There is not enough market to support production and a half dozen owners over the last 20 years have proven that fact. When we were a dealer in the mid 80's when the factory was in Lock Haven, we tried to tell them to concentrate on just parts and service the market already out there along with doing factory restorations when contracted instead of building airplanes. They did not listen then, and Harry didn't listen when I told him the same thing. Everyone is so mesmorized with building new airplanes, very few realize it will cost millions to build a handful of airplanes for a market that is already saturated. Overhead could be cut by 75% just concentrating on parts and a market that already exists for parts for 2500 aircraft in the field. I don't know if even that would be enough to support a business without diversifying some.

                          Mike

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                          • Re: News from the Factory III

                            Originally posted by Ragwing nut View Post
                            I don't know if even that would be enough to support a business without diversifying some.

                            Mike
                            Yup....http://www.newsday.com/community/gui...ory-navigation

                            Comment


                            • Re: News from the Factory III

                              Didn't Chet Peek's book mention something about pre-fab aluminum houses being built by Taylorcraft at the end of the war??
                              Taylorcraft : Making Better Aviators for 75 Years... and Counting

                              Bill Berle
                              TF#693

                              http://www.ezflaphandle.com
                              http://www.grantstar.net
                              N26451 (1940 BL(C)-65) 1988-90
                              N47DN (Auster Autocrat) 1992-93
                              N96121 (1946 BC-12D-85) 1998-99
                              N29544 (1940 BL(C)-85) 2005-08

                              Comment


                              • Re: News from the Factory III

                                Taylorcraft’s hot check qualifies as felony
                                City asking DA to investigate $15K note returned for NSF

                                By Chris Mahon
                                The Brownsville Herald

                                January 23, 2007 — The district attorney is being called in to deal with a $15,000 hot check written out to the city by Taylorcraft Aviation LLC.

                                “We will turn it over to the DA to be handled as he would any other hot check,” City Attorney Jim Goza said Monday. “I expect the matter to be sent to the DA’s office this week.”

                                Goza said a criminal investigation is possible after indebted Brownsville airport tenant Taylorcraft passed the bad check. According to the Texas Penal Code, writing a hot check for more than $1,500 is a state jail felony.

                                On Friday, city officials attempted to cash the $15,000 check from Taylorcraft President Harry Ingram. The amount was to cover a portion of rent and past due bills.

                                Ingram had no comment on the city’s plan or about the incident in general. “I’ll have a prepared statement at the end of the week,” he said.

                                City Manager Charlie Cabler said the city would provide the District Attorney’s Office with more information than just proof of a bounced check.

                                “We’re going to offer them all the information we have to see if they can assist us (because) … he (Ingram) owes us back rent,” Cabler said.

                                The airplane manufacturer owes the city more than $100,000, according to public records.

                                After the check was stamped for insufficient funds, the city locked up the property that Taylorcraft occupies at the airport.

                                Airport director Larry Brown said businesses have already started contacting him about leasing the Taylorcraft hanger.

                                The Greater Brownsville Incentives Corp. and the Brownsville Economic Development Council lured Taylorcraft to Brownsville in mid-2005. The company and Ingram already had more than $250,000 in court judgments and tax liens at that time.

                                It also had no licenses from the Federal Aviation Administration to make airplanes or airplane parts, according to federal officials.

                                In addition to not paying the city rent for a year and a half, the Greater Brownsville Incentives Corp. gave the company $47,000 in incentive money in late September. The most vocal supporter of Taylorcraft at that meeting was board member Bill Hudson, who later resigned when it was revealed that he was drinking beer during the public meeting.


                                TALK BACK
                                The city’s recent action on Taylorcraft debt: Too little too late or just in time?

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