Tom-D
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Tom-D
This is the one I emailed on. The engine has a timing issue and the wing walk area is soft.
Here is his response, for anyone interested.
Thank you for your interest in my client's Bellanca. This aircraft is being sold AS IS. The main issues are a timing issue with the engine and the walkway up the wing to the cockpit needs some support. The aircraft is no longer in a current annual, so we advise all who are interested to have an A & P Mechanic check out the aircraft to see what their recommendations would be to pass an annual. My client said that he would be able to ferry the aircraft, so this is not to say that it is no longer airworthy.
Please do not hesitate to ask if there is anything else I can help you with!
Thank you for your time!
Sincerely,
that broker needs a lesson on what " Airworthy means "
The wing walk is a 2000$ repair, very common.
The hidden potential disaster is beneath the wingwalk and the other wing. If these are like the Viking, they are fuel tank covers 1/4" mahogany and if you let water in, they get weak/rot. That is the 2000$ part. If it has been stored outside or left a very long time then the supporting ribs and spars could be damaged. Now you are talking a new wing which probably means parting the bird out to recoup your $10K. You will probably come out ahead on that, but if you planned to fly - and instead spend all your time in a garage photgraphing, cataloging, shipping parts to ebayers you will not be too happy about it.
It is still possible there is nothing seriously wrong with the airframe - it just needs a proper inspection to determine what you have here. The timing' - I guess the worst case would be improperly rebuilt or installed mags, that is not a disaster....unless this new engine had the cam installed one tooth off, when they say 'timing' as in valve timing, in that event you are cracking the case.
...unless this new engine had the cam installed one tooth off, when they say 'timing' as in valve timing, in that event you are cracking the case.
Nope not on a Franklin.. the accessory case can be removed and the adjustment to the cam can be made.
I have a pig in this sack....... tell me what color and sex it is.
haha wrong person for that analogy, with the proper inspection that can be answered.
I am seeing gears. Something tells me this will not be a (100$) piece of cake for the average owner regardless. If it actually is this problem.
Ok, so let's say the whole plane needs a recovering, the wings are soft, and the avionics are junk. Let's say you have the ability, facilities, and the willingness to do all the work (other than radios) yourself.
Assuming the new owner has the abilities, and has an A&P that is willing to supervise, your fabric and supplies are going to be between $10-$15k, plus the wood repair in the wings. This aircraft would not normally be a IFR trainer or use in IFR conditions very much. so we junk the loran, replace the 170 A with a B If it has a ADF, and it works keep it, If it don't junk it too.
So you just invested, what, $20-25K, radios inclusive. You offer $ 8K which gives you $2K to get the aircraft to your place. The current owner gaurantees clean title (he pays for title search) and provides all existing documentation, mx logs, inclusive.
Remember your dealing with a Broker, worried about his commission, not the owner, a sales contract dictating the conditions of the sale would be appropriate.
So what if that $20-25K I mentioned becomes $40-50K? After 8-18 months you have a pristine Bellanca which you can be assured of and it's a show stopper. It out performs the spam cans in every way. And all for what, maybe $70K total? Where is the problem?
How many wish they has a Jeanie in a bottle that could tell what the market will do on these old aircraft, Do you believe I would have taken the 24 as a project knowing what the market has done to the value of toys?
Some guys love projects. They thrive on projects. Using Tom D and his F-24 as an example, none of us really drool about a refab'd C-172, do we...no matter who did the work.
So can the wing.......
that was my point.
Tom, by the way, how's the -24 doing?
The question is, How do you open and inspect that wing with out buying the aircraft?
If it were my Aircraft, you wouldn't cut nothing until the check cleared the bank.
About a year or so ago, I showed an old pilot a Bellanca I'd found a "deal" on. He told me to steer clear of Bellanca's for my experience level. I didn't think he meant piloting experience (athough he could have- but he's a member of the camp that belives that a pilot that can fly an airplane can fly another airplane).
You learn the most interesting things in these threads....mahogany wings, wood rot and such.
Keep it coming...
The question is, How do you open and inspect that wing with out buying the aircraft?
You probably won't have heard of this if you are not dealing with them on a regular basis. We use Bellanca SL87A:
http://www.stinsonvoyager.com/specsheets/Bellanca Low Wing Wood Inspection.pdf
Henn, you are right about the steel tubing being at risk of corrosion. You are wrong about it being not pretty. They can be very pretty. Oh, and rot doesn't 'spread'. Any wet wood grows fungus. It can't spread to dry wood. Thanks to all for not propating the misnomer "dryrot".
Jaybird, all Bellancas especially Vikings are easy to fly. I can grease on a Viking 10x easier than a high wing Cessna. The biggest adaptation necessary when moving up to a Viking is learning to slow down at destination, much like an high performer. I agree if you don't have much experience inspecting, buying airplanes, stick to something common.
Greg - nice link.
I said nothing about "dry rot"
So it's a mexican standoff? Owner wants to sell. Buyer wants to inspect. Owner should pull wing or ultrasound the wood in situ.
A 3rd option would be a purchase agreement conditional to inspection. Sure, I'll still buy it, but not until that wing inspection is completed. That will be the starting point.
I hate seeing otherwise good machines die because of recalcitrant owners.
So it's a mexican standoff? Owner wants to sell. Buyer wants to inspect.
A lot of what happens is the buyer moves on to other planes (not like there is a shortage right now) and the seller waits til someone less picky shows up (that can be years right now).
If I needed a Franklin for my Stinson 108, I'd show the seller 5k cash and if he took it get a signed bill of sale, then pull the engine and place a sign on the aircraft "FREE STUFF" and walk away leaving the bill of sale in the cockpit,