Captain
Final Approach
Ive always flown part 121, 135, and 91K so it's always been covered under OpSpecs.
Recently though I've been approached by a guys guy who bought a P180 for personal use. He's an owner pilot and will attend FlightSafety for a full initial. He's done a pre-buy and I've been approached to fly with him on a trip. The plane is basically new with less than 1,000 hours on it.
My question is this...how do I know the plane is airworthy? If I were ramped what would an inspector expect me to know about the legality of the plane? AD compliance, sched maint., time and cycle checks, all that stuff.
What do I need to see to know if the plane is legal? Would I be expected to pour through all the log books and bounce that off every scheduled check and AD ever issued? Professional mechanics miss stuff doing that.
Anyone have experience with this?
Recently though I've been approached by a guys guy who bought a P180 for personal use. He's an owner pilot and will attend FlightSafety for a full initial. He's done a pre-buy and I've been approached to fly with him on a trip. The plane is basically new with less than 1,000 hours on it.
My question is this...how do I know the plane is airworthy? If I were ramped what would an inspector expect me to know about the legality of the plane? AD compliance, sched maint., time and cycle checks, all that stuff.
What do I need to see to know if the plane is legal? Would I be expected to pour through all the log books and bounce that off every scheduled check and AD ever issued? Professional mechanics miss stuff doing that.
Anyone have experience with this?