synclavier
Filing Flight Plan
- Joined
- Feb 2, 2014
- Messages
- 24
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Display name:
KanuterValve
Hi all,
I have the opportunity to buy a 1961 Cessna 175B with a GO-300-D. It has old narco radios, no xpndr, all logs are lost. The airframe is in good structural shape, but the paint is bad. The interior is decent. There are rusty door hinges, and corroded hardware, but nothing looks too bad on the exterior. The gear springs have what appears to be superficial rust in areas where the paint has chipped. The prop, GB, engine and accessories are all there, but again no logs. The plane has been sitting outside on the ramp for years. The last time it was started was 3-4 years ago.
I'm an A&P and I'm looking for a project to wrench on and to have something to get my ticket in and to have to enjoy afterward. The owner of the 175 wants $5000 for the plane. I've read up on the peculiarities of the GO-300, its TBO, the STC'd 360, and difficulty in overhauling it past a certain level of usage. My plan was to go through this plane slowly and inspect/repair/replace anything that needs it. I'm also aware that without the logs every AD has to be inspected for compliance or removed, instruments have to be removed/inspected RTS'd, engine has to be removed, inspected, RTS'd, time-limited parts replaced/overhauled and new times established and entered into new logbooks for the prop/engine/airframe. Yes, it's going to take a long damn time and cost a lot of money. I expect that.
I'm wanting to know if there are any hurdles related to the doing all of these things myself, or in cooperation with an IA, especially for the avionics and the engine. Does the FAA require that a certified avionics repair station inspect, test, and rts the instruments, or can I do that? And is the same true for the engine with an engine shop? Or am I not seeing the forest for the trees on this deal?
I have the opportunity to buy a 1961 Cessna 175B with a GO-300-D. It has old narco radios, no xpndr, all logs are lost. The airframe is in good structural shape, but the paint is bad. The interior is decent. There are rusty door hinges, and corroded hardware, but nothing looks too bad on the exterior. The gear springs have what appears to be superficial rust in areas where the paint has chipped. The prop, GB, engine and accessories are all there, but again no logs. The plane has been sitting outside on the ramp for years. The last time it was started was 3-4 years ago.
I'm an A&P and I'm looking for a project to wrench on and to have something to get my ticket in and to have to enjoy afterward. The owner of the 175 wants $5000 for the plane. I've read up on the peculiarities of the GO-300, its TBO, the STC'd 360, and difficulty in overhauling it past a certain level of usage. My plan was to go through this plane slowly and inspect/repair/replace anything that needs it. I'm also aware that without the logs every AD has to be inspected for compliance or removed, instruments have to be removed/inspected RTS'd, engine has to be removed, inspected, RTS'd, time-limited parts replaced/overhauled and new times established and entered into new logbooks for the prop/engine/airframe. Yes, it's going to take a long damn time and cost a lot of money. I expect that.
I'm wanting to know if there are any hurdles related to the doing all of these things myself, or in cooperation with an IA, especially for the avionics and the engine. Does the FAA require that a certified avionics repair station inspect, test, and rts the instruments, or can I do that? And is the same true for the engine with an engine shop? Or am I not seeing the forest for the trees on this deal?