Heh. It's a leaseback and I wasn't flying my plane when it happened. I'll, uh, include "no tapping" instructions in the checklists?As the needles approach 0, the pilot taps on the gauge to make sure he gets every drop of fuel. The farther he is from the runway, the harder he taps. Apparently you tapped too hard and got a "tilt"!
Ever had this kind of experience with this leaseback or others? Maybe ultra renter abuse and the plane is asking for mercy....
Or a shoddy mechanic or renter swapping parts at midnight.
Sorry to hear.
You don’t have any overnight rentals from the same person who may be swapping out good parts for bad? Serial numbers should confirm that. I know, long shot, but that’s a lotta stuff to break all in the same timeframe. Maybe some of it is related (hard landing, electrical, vacuum, who knows...).
If it makes you feel any better, I find stuff to fix every other flight it seems; But I bought a 40 year old plane and don’t fly it as often as a rental gets flown. I’m working out the bugs (or so I hope). Maybe you are too.
Don't feel bad, I've had landings that hard or worse.
I picked to fix this by installing Cies senders and an Aerospace Logic fuel gauge.
It took calling around to three shops before one would do the work. I was about to give up and start applying for a ferry permit. What the hell? Both that turned down the work said it was too complex. How complex is a Cies fuel sender and digital gauge? Confused. And now I'm over a barrel waiting for the quote from the last shop and hoping they don't realize that.
Mechanical instruments really don’t like vibration. Well some vibration may be okay but not the panel shaking kind. That said, how’s the balance on the engine/prop? Keep’r smooooooth.
It isn't complex at all. On a Cessna I'm thinking you can get to the sender via an inspection port. On my Cherokee I had to remove the tanks. When its all said and done, you will love your new gauge. I've been flying with mine for a couple of weeks now. They are dead on accurate and work just like a car's fuel gauge. The hardest part (that isn't hard at all) is the calibration of the gauge 2 gallons at a time.
Previous owner operation is a pain. I had to either overhaul or replace most of the mechanical instruments in the 'kota.The prop has been balanced quite recently to a nice spec and the whole thing actually runs quite smoothly. I don't think this is the issue, unless the previous owner shook it to death and it just happened to fail right now. Doesn't matter...it did fail and it needs to be replaced. Bleh.
Do you believe one of my renters had a hard landing that would have caused that? Damn...maybe I should get the aircraft inspected.
Well, finally found a shop to install the fuel senders and fuel gauge. We'll see what it really costs, but Cies is apparently giving the guidance that it's 16 hours of work. Yipe. That's a good deal more than I was expecting. I know there's work to do, as the senders as they are now powered, so a new line needs to be run to each tank. And calibration needs to be done. But it's still a little surprising.
Also, holy crap, that was a $4000 needle.
Wait... what?!
Confused. Was that the total price meaning you have the fuel system working again? Now I know how much I saved by doing it myself under the supervision of a mechanic and paying the IA $50 for his signature on the 337.
Confused. Was that the total price meaning you have the fuel system working again? Now I know how much I saved by doing it myself under the supervision of a mechanic and paying the IA $50 for his signature on the 337.
Gawd I hate Textron. People used to claim Beech parts were expensive, but I never saw the kind of gouging that I have once Textron was running the show.Heh. It's a leaseback and I wasn't flying my plane when it happened. I'll, uh, include "no tapping" instructions in the checklists?
More seriously, Cessna wants 3 AMU for a new gauge.
FTFYCertified airplanes supported by Textron .The worst kind.
If I was looking for a 182, I’d search for an early model that is well supported by aftermarket vendors. What you want to avoid is having to go back to the OEM for parts.This is whole conversation is making me second guess my thoughts of a C182...
If I was looking for a 182, I’d search for an early model that is well supported by aftermarket vendors. What you want to avoid is having to go back to the OEM for parts.
I would think so, but I’m not as experienced with the different models/years of 182.An early 80’s R ok?
FTFY
An early 80’s R ok?
This is whole conversation is making me second guess my thoughts of a C182...
Prop overhaul at annual failed for hub corrosion. How many AMU's is a new McCauley?
Exactly. Like I said in the other post. Contrary to urban legend, Beech part prices really weren’t that bad until Textron bought the company. Then they got downright stupid overnight.& Beechcraft...oh wait they are Textron now too