Is it legal for a Private Pilot to replace mags?
Doesn't really matter to the FAA -- unless it's an E-AB or there's an A&P supervising/signing, it's not legal no matter how much the pilot knows about doing the work.Do you know how?
Doesn't really matter to the FAA -- unless it's an E-AB or there's an A&P supervising/signing, it's not legal no matter how much the pilot knows about doing the work.
That assumes lack of the legally-required supervision.Point is, if he doesn't know how he won't get it done anyway.
If the engine doesn't run after the mechanic "personally observes the work being done to the extent necessary to ensure that it is being done properly and ... is readily available, in person, for consultation" as required by 14 CFR 43.3(d)), there is a larger problem with which to deal, namely, the supervising mechanic's competence.who would sign him off under the supervision, when the engine won't run?
If done legally with a competent mechanic's supervision as required by 43.3(d), that takes care of itself -- just might take a bit longer. :wink2:Square 1, step 1, does he know how?
That assumes lack of the legally-required supervision.
Experimental yes, certified no.
I pulled the magnetos on my experimental last year, completely tore them down,rebuilt them (using parts I pulled from magnetos I bought from a pawn shop), and reinstalled them, and put it all in the log book. I had no idea how to do it before I started but that has never stopped me with anything else in life.
Believe it or not - tractor forums were the best reference for how to properly rebuild them.
They're working great, BTW.
If the engine doesn't run after the mechanic "personally observes the work being done to the extent necessary to ensure that it is being done properly and ... is readily available, in person, for consultation" as required by 14 CFR 43.3(d)), there is a larger problem with which to deal, namely, the supervising mechanic's competence.
Did you, or did you not, time them 180 degrees out?
lmfao, ok Tom... Did I or did I not sort that out? Everything you work on works the first time and you never do something incorrectly that you fix when your quality checks don't make sense?
Send me one that's better than my A75 and I'll bolt it up and give it a run. I can find the right BTDC position now in a minute or so. I've done it like 50 times now. lol...Try timing an engine that turns the other way.
Send me one that's better than my A75 and I'll bolt it up and give it a run. I can find the right BTDC position now in a minute or so. I've done it like 50 times now. lol...
Speaking of which, any idea why the service manual for the A75 calls for one mag to be at 32 degrees and the other at 29 degrees (i think those are the values, either way they're different). When I bought it they were both at the same position and it was less likely to kickback like that...but I set it to what the manual called for when I rebuilt the mags..it's just way easier to have it kickback when propping now.
Send me one that's better than my A75 and I'll bolt it up and give it a run. I can find the right BTDC position now in a minute or so. I've done it like 50 times now. lol...
Find the proper TDC, mark it on the prop flange, back it up 30 degrees and mark that. then all you need to do the next time is, leave the #1 plugs in, remove 1 from the other three cylinders, then find the compression stroke of #1, by feel. then go to your marks.
Wouldn't the 32 degree mag be carrying the load? it would fire first. the 29 degree mag would be firing into a burning mass.
TCM back in the day wanted a bigger split between the two positions. we now set them at 30+- 1 If I remember right that was a way old SB.
That would work but I bought a fancy digital setup that I need to use to justify the cost . I'll try to find that service bulletin.
Hmm..This SB was published in 2010 and calls for the 29/32. I'm not a big fan of its kickback tendency like that thought.
http://www.tcmlink.com/pdf2/msb94-8d.pdf
Who hocks magnetos?
That's basically what I did the first time. Problem is I didn't check to make sure I was on the compression stroke to begin with and was actually on the exhaust stroke. That is how I ended up perfectly 180 degrees off.That is a new SB. that doesn't make much sense. time it like a C-65 in table 2. you will like it a lot more when it doesn't kick back.
The wording in the para telling how to find TDC is weird too. It simply means to turn the engine in the direction of rotation until it touches the piston stop, mark that spot. then opposite rotation until it touches the piston stop. Mark that position. remove the piston stop, rotate the engine in direction of rotation until a point half way between those two marks is reached, that is TDC.
That's basically what I did the first time. Problem is I didn't check to make sure I was on the compression stroke to begin with and was actually on the exhaust stroke. That is how I ended up perfectly 180 degrees off.
That is important. Forget a step, be messed up.
Yea. And you were the first person in the entire history of the internal combustion engines to ever do that.That is how I ended up perfectly 180 degrees off.
If that were true, nobody could supervise anything. As I said, if the mechanic is competent, s/he will supervise properly based on his/her knowledge of the person doing the work. Absent any knowledge, a competent supervisor supervises very, very closely. And if the mechanic is not competent, it doesn't matter who's doing the work -- it won't get done right.You forget, the supervisor must make the decision on how much supervision they must apply, with out knowing the workers knowledge they can't do that.
Oy. So what, you think when someone comes to me for training, I just let them go fly and then see if they crash?I don't understand how a CFI doesn't know the thought process of understanding what a student knows and what they must teach and what they simply can verify and go from there.
methheads who haven't stolen anything else...
Believe it or not - tractor forums were the best reference for how to properly rebuild them.
If that were true, nobody could supervise anything. As I said, if the mechanic is competent, s/he will supervise properly based on his/her knowledge of the person doing the work. Absent any knowledge, a competent supervisor supervises very, very closely. And if the mechanic is not competent, it doesn't matter who's doing the work -- it won't get done right.
Oy. So what, you think when someone comes to me for training, I just let them go fly and then see if they crash?