Saraq
Filing Flight Plan
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- Oct 25, 2021
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Sara
What specific aircraft model and year. But no clue on an estimate--no where near enough info. However, while the elevator/stab damage will be reasonable, the tailcone damage could be your main issue depending on the level of disassembly and whether it tweaked the alignment. Are you making an insurance claim? If so you may want to discuss this with them prior to talking to the shop.how much y’all might think I might be looking at for repair costs.
Ground loop in Cessna 172 TW conversion.What in the name of Odin did you do to that poor airplane?
If the damage involves any of the tail wheel mod parts you may want to review the STC docs to see what they say about repairs. Or if the STC holder is still in business then call them. A standard Cessna 172 tailcone is fairly easy to repair given part availability but if there are any speciality parts needed to repair a part of the conversion you may want to address this before any repairs take place.Ground loop in Cessna 172 TW conversion.
The hangar rash the FBO put on mine was 11K for merely one sheet of upper wing skin and the replacement of the outer section of the aft spar (PA-28 wings have 2-piece aft spars). The only puncture was no bigger than 8 inches on the wing and no ribs were damaged by sheer luck. And that includes an aileron re-skin.
This looks a lot more expansive. With inflation running at 5.9% (that's what uncle sammy is giving SS and DOD retirement recipients in 2022), my guess is you're looking at closer to 30K+ all in for that kind of sheet metal work and control surface replacement, and I don't even know what the extent of internal damage is on the empennage. If the fuselage is tweaked at the empennage then forget it.
Global aerospace (same underwriter as I use) caps you at 70% of hull value for a total. So if that thing is insured for less than 50, I think you're getting a check back, not an airplane. Of course, that's the small potatoes, given the whole "misunderstanding" with the representation of the aircraft thing discussed in the prior thread. There's a high potential here for a decline-to-quote on the replacement aircraft if you insist on insuring another taildragger.
. Honestly, this has me considering going to get my A&P.
No prop damage at all. Here is a picture of the plane post-accident from both sides.I would guess north of 30k. I imagine this level of damage also resulted in a prop strike? The plane will likely be totaled then it will be up to you if you want to buy it back and fix it. The plane will need to be disassembled and a jig built to replace the skins. You can probably source a used elevator, can't tell if the first gash is a wing skin or under the horizontal stabilizer. Then you will need paint, engine tear down if there was a prop strike and likely a new prop.
Apologies, that was just in reference to the shop being backed up (just making jokes where I can) .It does? How so? I don't see any useful connection between the two.
Oh ok, I see now the gear folded under the plane and not out. I'd still say 30k especially if you account for paint work. You might get lucky and source a used wing (if that's where the gash is) otherwise that's a pretty big job to re-skin it. The fuselage will be a huge task fixing the gear box, jigging it, and replacing the skins. idk what shop rates are around you but I think it's 125/hr at my local maintenance facility and I could easily see 120-160 hrs of labor plus parts. The insurance company will likely make a decision based on a shop doing all the work, if it's salvaged and you buy it back you could save a lot of money doing the disassembly your self.No prop damage at all. Here is a picture of the plane post-accident from both sides. View attachment 101750 View attachment 101751
@Saraq , some info here about the STC's on that. Do you know which one it was? https://www.pilotsofamerica.com/community/threads/172-tailwheel-conversion.82560/If the damage involves any of the tail wheel mod parts you may want to review the STC docs to see what they say about repairs. Or if the STC holder is still in business then call them. A standard Cessna 172 tailcone is fairly easy to repair given part availability but if there are any speciality parts needed to repair a part of the conversion you may want to address this before any repairs take place.
Figure 80 hours of labor plus parts for the gearboxes alone.The gear box is the biggest issue, lots of labor there. The rest isn't that bad, I don't think.
I would email some actual shops like Beagles in Colorado. This looks nearly totaled to me.
O-300 unless it was converted.What engine is in it?
Beegles, at KGXY.I would email some actual shops like Beagles in Colorado. This looks nearly totaled to me.
O-300 unless it was converted.
Curious. What type aircraft and did the dent hit a spar or something structural? Seems a bit high for a skin dent.Just a dent, no tearing of the metal: $21,000.
If it has an O-360 it will probably be gone before you know it. Even the gear damage doesn't look that bad as the bulkheads seem straight. Would be a nice project though. Makes me want to clean up the shop...If it was totaled with an o-360 I might be interested in buying it and fixing it.
Curious. What type aircraft and did the dent hit a spar or something structural? Seems a bit high for a skin dent.
Must of hit something substantial under the wing skin. Unfortunately, I don't think there is an easy repair on any Bonanza compared to a Cessna or Piper wing. Always seems to require a lot of labor on Beechcraft structural repairs.A bonanza and it required pulling the wing off and splitting it.
Must of hit something substantial under the wing skin. Unfortunately, I don't think there is an easy repair on any Bonanza compared to a Cessna or Piper wing. Always seems to require a lot of labor on Beechcraft structural repairs.
Key words, skin replacement vs skin repair. Given the Bonanza has a separate repair manual I'm sure the shops like to follow it. But have seen enough Beech structural repairs where common-sense had won out to include repairing wings installed. More curiosity... did you or your mechanic ever inquire why not a simple flush repair on the dent? And since the dent didn't hit any structure was it out-of-limits requiring a repair?But no, this was a simple skin replacement.
While I had preferred weather-damaged projects this one has a certain draw to it. Would make for a nice project with the tailwheel.buying the banged up plane from insurance