TheTraveler
Line Up and Wait
I asked the question about a year ago just exactly what can you do to your non-experimental plane yourself without an A/P, inspection, or approval? Someone was kind enough to send me a link to the actual rules and regs, but for me, they are far from clear, understandable, comprehensible reading.
My question is, who is really to know, except for you, if you were to do something to your plane? With your medical, you have a history that follows you, an be investigated, and probably would be under certain circumstances. But that's obviously not the same as replacing some bolts, gauges, or whatever on your plane. I'm not talking about yanking the engine and doing a complete overhaul here, but just as if you were tinkering with your car, who is to know if you've been tinkering with your plane?
So you get a nice used Cessna which is decked out in that oh so fabulous 60's and 70's dreary colored carpeting and seats, and decide the hell with it...I'm going to carpet this thing and have it upholstered. And off you go. Next inspection, is the A/P going to remark "Wow...who/when did the interior work?" What happens in that situation?
Or you're up in the air and notice that your attitude indicator is a bit sticky. So you go out, buy one, and change it out. It's not serialized to the airplane, right? So aside from you and your close buddies (certainly not the wife who doesn't want to know how much you spent), who else is to know, and how would they find out?
I could go on and on with examples.
The brakes that I've seen aren't dissimilar from your standard automotive/motorcycle type brakes, and you change out pads and rotors.
You pull the tire off and run down to your local guy and have it changed.
Your radio burns up, you find a new one, and you change it out.
Your PTT button on the yoke pops out and the spring goes flying. So you stop in to radio shack, get what you need, and replace it.
So what?
Who on this thread couldn't replace a broken door strap? Fix a window latch? Replace a tach? Swap out a radio? Maybe even swap an alternator?
I doubt that there are many non-AP's pulling out engines, changing crankshafts, replacing props, working on retractable landing gear, etc. But who knows?
My point here isn't to encourage anyone to break the law or to start an argument on what you should and/or shouldn't do. But being around builders for several years, I've never met a pilot yet that doesn't like to tinker with stuff regardless if they built the plane or not. I find it hard to believe that everyone takes everything to the A/P for replace/repair and inspection. If you don't want to disclose, that's ok...but seriously...if you're working on stuff that you're not supposed to, just how exactly does one get caught, and what do they do about it?
My question is, who is really to know, except for you, if you were to do something to your plane? With your medical, you have a history that follows you, an be investigated, and probably would be under certain circumstances. But that's obviously not the same as replacing some bolts, gauges, or whatever on your plane. I'm not talking about yanking the engine and doing a complete overhaul here, but just as if you were tinkering with your car, who is to know if you've been tinkering with your plane?
So you get a nice used Cessna which is decked out in that oh so fabulous 60's and 70's dreary colored carpeting and seats, and decide the hell with it...I'm going to carpet this thing and have it upholstered. And off you go. Next inspection, is the A/P going to remark "Wow...who/when did the interior work?" What happens in that situation?
Or you're up in the air and notice that your attitude indicator is a bit sticky. So you go out, buy one, and change it out. It's not serialized to the airplane, right? So aside from you and your close buddies (certainly not the wife who doesn't want to know how much you spent), who else is to know, and how would they find out?
I could go on and on with examples.
The brakes that I've seen aren't dissimilar from your standard automotive/motorcycle type brakes, and you change out pads and rotors.
You pull the tire off and run down to your local guy and have it changed.
Your radio burns up, you find a new one, and you change it out.
Your PTT button on the yoke pops out and the spring goes flying. So you stop in to radio shack, get what you need, and replace it.
So what?
Who on this thread couldn't replace a broken door strap? Fix a window latch? Replace a tach? Swap out a radio? Maybe even swap an alternator?
I doubt that there are many non-AP's pulling out engines, changing crankshafts, replacing props, working on retractable landing gear, etc. But who knows?
My point here isn't to encourage anyone to break the law or to start an argument on what you should and/or shouldn't do. But being around builders for several years, I've never met a pilot yet that doesn't like to tinker with stuff regardless if they built the plane or not. I find it hard to believe that everyone takes everything to the A/P for replace/repair and inspection. If you don't want to disclose, that's ok...but seriously...if you're working on stuff that you're not supposed to, just how exactly does one get caught, and what do they do about it?