Checkout_my_Six
Touchdown! Greaser!
so....would a serviceable part, that is used, still be airworthy?
Prior to about 20 years ago, there were polished props all over the bloody place and nobody seemed to give a flying ****, then suddenly a giant kerfuffle arose and that ended with condemned and repainted props across the country, which is the subject base for this part of the thread. There were 3 planes on the field that I was working on at the time that were affected, one had to replace his prop, the other two got painted. I'm wondering where that came from.
Hartzell specifically bans polishing their props.
I'm sorry Henning but Googling "widely publicized prohibition on polishing props" produces nothing other than a link to your own post.
Not exactly relevant to this discussion, since the issue here is only whether the ICA must be followed by a maintainer, not how to write one and get it approved by the FAA.
It's 43.13(a), not FAA Order 8110.54A, which makes use of the ICA mandatory by persons performing maintenance under Part 43 (like Tom and the OP's mechanic).
so....would a serviceable part, that is used, still be airworthy?
IIRC, it was a Hartzel that was condemned and had to be replaced and McCauleys had to be etched and painted. I think it was the Senseniches that could stay polished. It was an FAA guy that came to the field and brought it all up BTW, so there was definitely something at the FAA that came up about it because he put stickers on the affected planes and came in the shop to explain that those props were not in compliance, and Hartzel didn't have a procedure for bringing a polished prop into compliance, they said, "It needs to be replaced."
Been watching old episodes of "Law and Order"??
I refuse to argue with idiots. I presented factual documents and let the reader draw his/her own conclusion.
See post #116
I did not read in the documents what would answer according to the McCaully ICA that permits a mechanic who dressed one of their props to return it to service without touching up the paint. I'm not arguing, I believe it exists, however you haven't provided a reference that makes it clear.
I realize you are not an A&P and you do not hold any mechanic (FAA) ratings. Part of being an A&P is the ability to read applicable material and make a determination on procedures to bring an item into compliance. Go back and read 14 CFR Parts 35, 43, and 91, along with the mentioned AC's in this thread, the Prop ICA's and maintenance manuals. Then make a determination.
I think you just contradicted your self.....
McCauley strongly recommends that all blades be painted
I realize you are not an A&P and you do not hold any mechanic (FAA) ratings. Part of being an A&P is the ability to read applicable material and make a determination on procedures to bring an item into compliance. Go back and read 14 CFR Parts 35, 43, and 91, along with the mentioned AC's in this thread, the Prop ICA's and maintenance manuals. Then make a determination.
I think I'm gonna paint my prop today.....
I think I'm gonna paint my prop today.....
thanks Jimmy.....I'll see them when it starts leaking.East coast propeller, Lancaster, penna. Randy is manager. He will explain the polished prop syndrome and the filing of a metal prop. Painting it yourself is not a good idea, that is if it is currently not painted but rather polished metal.
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Here’s the concern. He wants to fly into Oshkosh this year. He’s concerned that there is a herd of FAA reps that just scour the field like a kid in a candy store looking for anything like that. Legit concern? I am probably going to go with him so would share that concern to some degree.
So without wading through all the minutia of the previous 4 pages what would your level of concern be in the above scenario?
That would be the least of my concerns.
A) the FAA doesn't do this.
B) even if they did there are sooo many planes there where would they even start?
C) even if they did (which again, they don't) they would have bigger fish to fry.