Had a beech travel air with light hail damage,from 50 ft it looked good. Took the damage in consideration,when purchasing the plane. Flew it for 800 hrs and traded it for a single. If you buy the airplane right you shouldn’t loose much when selling.
Don't like damage. Hail damage is damage and very expensive to get rid of to boot (I think). Some people say the dimples improve air flow, so why fix it.
Pictures of what prompted the question here -
https://www.controller.com/listings...9-grumman-american-general-aa1-yankee-clipper
What would it take to fix this? What's the risk of not fixing it?
Doubt I will be buying, but it's an opportunity to learn.
Read paragraph 10-50 of the manual, the second part of that statement pretty much says the entire skins be replaced when extensive damage has been done.There are always dent limits on aircraft skins. Would be nice to know if they have been exceeded. Hail damage has totalled more than one airplane. Wonder if this guy got the insurance check and decided to sell rather than fix or if it was totalled and he bought it back.
You did,Who said sand the aluminum?
To scrap it, there are several things that are quite valuable the engine, prop, instruments, canopies, and the hard parts that holds it all together.I would give him $3500 for it.... Scrap price!
His asking price is more than a nice non hail damage example.
I would give him $3500 for it.... Scrap price!
His asking price is more than a nice non hail damage example.
Show me where I said that.
I have considered restoring a Grumman and done extensive research on them, and that is why I haven't.
But you still haven't shown us how you'd remove the skin from a Grumman wing to replace it..
Which only shows us you don't know how.
Totally agree with that.Not really - its' only 220 hour since OH, so the engine carries a bit of value. Without any damage, it's probably in the 25k range. I think the seller is knocking off 10k for the damage, but from the sounds of it, that isn't anywhere close to enough to repair it.
Not really - its' only 220 hour since OH, so the engine carries a bit of value. Without any damage, it's probably in the 25k range. I think the seller is knocking off 10k for the damage, but from the sounds of it, that isn't anywhere close to enough to repair it.
Probably not a aluminum car. Steel acts differently than aluminum. If that airplane came to me for a annual I would check the dents against the limits provided by the manual. If limits exceeded I wouldn't sign it off as airworthy.I watched a man take a car with hail damage. He parked it in the sun on a very hot day of around 100 degree's. He then took some dry ice and went over every spot with this dry ice and they all popped out.
Pretty much the same.Probably not a aluminum car. Steel acts differently than aluminum. If that airplane came to me for a annual I would check the dents against the limits provided by the manual. If limits exceeded I wouldn't sign it off as airworthy.
If that airplane came to me for a annual I would check the dents against the limits provided by the manual. If limits exceeded I wouldn't sign it off as airworthy.
Pre-paid annual. There's too many owners that don't like the results and have no problem cheating a shop.I wonder, in a case like that, would you do the whole annual and then give the owner the bad news (in the list of discrepancies) or, since the hail damage is so obvious, would you just evaluate it first, give the owner the bad news, and the option to continue the annual or not. And, when something like that happens, how do you get paid?
I believe there are owners that don't realize that If I do the annual, and find any one of a multitude of dimples over the limits, I must sign off the annual as un-airworthy, then the owner has no choice but to repair the aircraft or scrap it.Pre-paid annual. There's too many owners that don't like the results and have no problem cheating a shop.
Apparently at least one of the two didn't understand the informal warning.The two of you need to take your arguments to a private conversation. I'm sure the two that I'm talking about know who they are... as does everyone else.
Probably not a aluminum car. Steel acts differently than aluminum. If that airplane came to me for a annual I would check the dents against the limits provided by the manual. If limits exceeded I wouldn't sign it off as airworthy.