FlyingMonkey
Pre-takeoff checklist
- Joined
- Aug 31, 2014
- Messages
- 408
- Display Name
Display name:
FlyingMonkey
It's been a tense few months anticipating compliance with the Piper eddy current wing spar AD. Here is my story...
It was definitely a relief! Thank you!I was tense watching this. I know you put a lot into the plane making it your own. Quite a relief. Happy for you.
Glad your plane got a clean bill of health. Excellent explanation of the problem and the test. Thanks.
haha ok. I'll bring my safety glasses next time.It's good the test passed.
But I have to criticize you. Laying on your back under the airplane and spraying a petroleum compound onto the spar bolts without wearing eye protection is, well, stupid. Any activity you do in the hangar or at home that exposes your eyes to damage by foreign fluids or objects requires safety glasses to be worn, period.
I have at least a dozen pairs of safety glasses in my home, garage, and shop. I keep them in clean "shorty" athletic socks, so they don't get scratches on the lenses. You don't get second chances with eye damage.
The same goes for hearing protection. You might look like a dweeb wearing earplugs or muffs to blow leaves, but hearing loss is cumulative. You won't know it's occurred until it's too late.
Up your game, dude.
Yeah the test was so quick. I had to organize my mechanic, the tech, and another plane on the field to keep the tech's cost down a bit since he was traveling to us.Glad she passed. All that prep work for a relatively brief test. Better than a long drawn out test across multiple hours or days.
Thanks!Nice video, congrats on passing!
It is a one time AD, but considered an interim one to gather data. I believe they will issue some other guidance or AD based on the findings of this one, perhaps expand the inspection to more airframes with a different factored hours formula or narrow the criteria somehow to target the trending failures. Time will tell! I don't anticipate to have to do it again though.Question. Now that your plane has passed, what interval if any, does the AD require retesting?
Interesting. The skydive outfit I used to work for had a high time Twin Otter and we had to have someone come in and do eddy current the wing rivets in order to keep it compliant. I don't recall the test interval, but I believe there was an interval. Which makes sense. We were testing because it was a high time airframe. Just because it wasn't cracked now, doesn't mean it wouldn't be cracked at some point in the future.It is a one time AD, but considered an interim one to gather data. I believe they will issue some other guidance or AD based on the findings of this one, perhaps expand the inspection to more airframes with a different factored hours formula or narrow the criteria somehow to target the trending failures. Time will tell! I don't anticipate to have to do it again though.
Cliff notes version? no clickbait vids for me.
To which a synopsis could just be posted....but PoA clicks aren't as cool as YT clicks. Gotta pimp that channel.I didn't watch it yet, but I'm going to assume he complied with the wing spar AD inspection and it passed.
To which a synopsis could just be posted....but PoA clicks aren't as cool as YT clicks. Gotta pimp that channel.
but...WILL IT FLY?eh, it was interesting to see how they perform the inspection.
but...WILL IT FLY?
GTFO with that crap.
I think you need your own youtube channel where you just go and rip other youtubers a new one. I'd subscribe. and like. and probably hit the bell too.
The title was on the clickbaity side, but 13,000 views vs. dozens to hundreds for mine.Cliff notes version? no clickbait vids for me.
Locally a bunch of >10k hour pa28 trainers are passing with no issues. I'm beginning to think the results say more about the a&p and ec tester than it does the airplane.Mine passed today! Now i know the relief you feel when everything turns out. I was worried because the airframe has 17K hrs. and has spent It's entire life as a trainer....
Perhaps I should title one of my videos "Think you understand lift? You are wrong!" or "Potentially Fatal Rotax Failure!"
so so cynical. You make a lot of assumptions and you don't even know me. In my day job as a commercial cinematographer I have no interaction with the audience. I have no idea if people have seen or enjoy my work at all. Since audience connection is lacking from my (paid/career) work I am finding it elsewhere. I spend dozens and dozens of hours on each Youtube video for my own creative satisfaction - total creative control to communicate things the way I want to and the way I am good at. But also I want as many people to see this stuff as possible- it's why we who make films make them- to reach people in one way or another. And it has been incredibly gratifying to connect with other aviators over this content. I'll make a title and thumbnail the way it needs to be done to bring in an audience on youtube- that is just the nature of the platform. I hate it as much as you do, but it is what it is for (free) content on the internet. I'd rather more people see the results of my efforts than fewer. You can either choose to see the content for what it is, or remain cynical and let that color your perception of it. Totally your choice. But I'll keep making these videos because it has been so fun expressing my ideas, capturing family moments, and telling aviation stories that seem to have connected with others who feel the same way about flying as I do.To which a synopsis could just be posted....but PoA clicks aren't as cool as YT clicks. Gotta pimp that channel.
... In my day job as a commercial cinematographer I have no interaction with the audience. I have no idea if people have seen or enjoy my work at all...
thank you!I enjoy it a lot, love the fun you and your family have with aviation and, especially, the high-quality production values you bring to the channel (to be expected, I imagine!). Keep 'em coming, says I!