Tom-D
Taxi to Parking
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Tom-D
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Looks to me like the AD just covers stuff we do at every inspection anyway.
You may do it any way, but others don't. This AD removes the 1000 hour tt on the track to be included in the AD. Now all Cessna seat tracks are included in the AD. Plus the new measurements on the Tangs will take most of the seats in use now out of service.
Was the 100 hour tis requirement in the old AD?
Too bad there is not a really good fix for this problem.
I'd love to know where they're getting the parts for $110 as mentioned in the costs section of the AD.
A friend replaced seat rails in his 182 this year and it cost him over $400 a rail set (per side).
He may have upgraded them to a sturdier STC'ed rail set, but the factory rails aren't $110... and they'll be even higher now...
. I hate to spend the money on this but better that then hoping my wife can catch the wheel if my seat slips....
Frank
Actually, according to the AD the $110 cost is for the roller replacement parts. They show the rails as being $225 per rail for a total of $450 per side. Thats more inline with what you expected? In addition they're showing $170 per rail for labor or $395 per rail parts and labor.
I caught the wheel as a friends seat rolled back on takeoff once. He was a big guy and in the last hole in the track. The plane was a new (to us at CAP) 1984 182 and for some reason the seat slipped. It was probably not latched all the way. In any case I grabbed the wheel as he rolled back to the seat stop....or at least I stopped the wheel as he rolled back. The takeoff probably looked normal from the ground but scared the hell out of us. I always rattle the seat around to make sure the pins are in place and locked prior to startup. If it can happen to a 182 with around 200 hours on it than the older more well used tracks have a better chance of letting go. I hate to spend the money on this but better that then hoping my wife can catch the wheel if my seat slips....
Frank
Better idea, check the hole size and taper before flight, if they look worn get them replaced.
you can read the AD, you can see, so getterdone.
I have one in my flight instruction bag....
How much is it to completely replace the track? Would that get rid of the A/D?
(new plane owner, just trying to learn me a few things)
How much is it to completely replace the track? Would that get rid of the A/D?
(new plane owner, just trying to learn me a few things)
How do you position the stop on the track so as to stop the seat from slipping.
I can't reach the stop after I am in the seat. all I can do is to position the stop before I get in, and If I put it where it will do some good, it is too far forward for me to enter the seat.
How much is it to completely replace the track? Would that get rid of the A/D?
My time and materials on my last track replacement was a little over $800.00 for all 4 (new plane owner, just trying to learn me a few things)
New Plane Owner at age 16 David, wow that's pretty good. How did you do it?
BTW The McFarlane rails are much more robust than the OEM Cessna Rails, and they cost a bit more than the OEM's to replace. The job is time consuming and more expensive than the prediction in the A-D.
When I was at about 7 hours and flew Cherokee, I entered a turn to final when *BAM* - the Johnson bar jumped from 2 notches of flap back to 1 notch. That was pretty funny, although granted, not as dangerous as the seat track.I just fly a Piper.
Replacing the tracks no longer removes the AD, all seat tracks and roller assemblies now get inspected every 100 hours. before unser the old AD the trcaks did not need inspecting until they had 1000 hours in service.
If you were to buy a new cessna it would need AD compliance in the first 100 hours.
The AD applies only to the older pre-restart models.Dan
No. Not if you replace with the factory rails anyway. .
If you're working on a Cessna seat this year, remember that even though the thing is a PITA in some respects...
Cessna is still offering their "seat belt" style safety strappy thing that bolts to the floor and keeps the seat from heading for the aircraft's nether-regions for free... take the aircraft to any Authorized Cessna Service Center.
Offer ends in June or July I believe.
Cessna is still offering their "seat belt" style safety strappy thing that bolts to the floor and keeps the seat from heading for the aircraft's nether-regions for free... take the aircraft to any Authorized Cessna Service Center.
Offer ends in June or July I believe.
I just fly a Piper.
Does the McFarlane rail set end the AD for that aircraft?
No..... the AD is by aircraft make and model, not part number.
Ah... so you could bolt the seat to the floor and climb over it to get in, and the FAA would still think an inspection was needed.
Only seat that has ever slipped on me was in a Seneca...I just fly a Piper.