rk
Filing Flight Plan
I am looking at this airplane to buy and turned out it sustained significant damages in a runway excursion back in 2005: https://planecrashmap.com/plane/va/N127X/
To quote from the NTSB report: A post accident inspection of the airplane revealed that the composite structure had sustained multiple cracks, tears, and punctures. Further inspection also showed that the nose wheel landing gear, as well as the right main landing gear, had separated from the airplane. Additionally, the firewall was bent and portions of the exhaust system had separated from the #4 cylinder...
Initially I decided to back out of the purchase due to this history, but the salesperson is telling me that composite repairs are different from metal repairs since unlike metal, once the repair is done in a composite it will be like new. I found that a bit odd, because to my limited knowledge small cracks or other internal damages are hard to find in composite, so it's more likely that something might have gotten missed during the initial repair.
What do you folks think? If two airplanes have similar damage histories - one composite and the other is metal, which one would you be more comfortable flying after the repair?
To quote from the NTSB report: A post accident inspection of the airplane revealed that the composite structure had sustained multiple cracks, tears, and punctures. Further inspection also showed that the nose wheel landing gear, as well as the right main landing gear, had separated from the airplane. Additionally, the firewall was bent and portions of the exhaust system had separated from the #4 cylinder...
Initially I decided to back out of the purchase due to this history, but the salesperson is telling me that composite repairs are different from metal repairs since unlike metal, once the repair is done in a composite it will be like new. I found that a bit odd, because to my limited knowledge small cracks or other internal damages are hard to find in composite, so it's more likely that something might have gotten missed during the initial repair.
What do you folks think? If two airplanes have similar damage histories - one composite and the other is metal, which one would you be more comfortable flying after the repair?
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