It might end up being that way, but the AD as currently written in that document is merely an interim action looking for data. What people care about is the inspection side of the thing. That's what costs money and labor. A "recurring EC inspection" evolution of this AD is facts not in evidence right now, however natural it may be to assume that would be what the superseding version of this AD will look like in the end.
If such a recurring EC inspection requirement is made, it will definitively favor the non-100hr in their history (with complete logbook) PA28s for sure, on a resale basis. Good news for me. Guess I'll be able to add another carrot to the stick in order to facilitate getting rid of this thing after all. People with high "factor time" spars are screwed on this exchange, again on a resale basis.
Now, having to do a recurring EC inspection would give me pause on two fronts:
(1)it's a logistics PITA, if the prop hub EC inspection on my Arrow is any indication. It's not the cost, but having to schlep the airplane around or pay a premium to have the guy drive to your prop to run the probe every 100 hours gets annoying. The inspection itself is not expensive. Neither would be this one on the spar, except....
..(2) and most importantly, this inspection
is destructive in my book, because it requires people to physically mess with that spar bolt area. That's a no-go for me. Just like the comanche tail horn torque tube AD, this
will lead to maintenance-induced cracking, which defeats the purpose the inspection was supposed to guard against in the first place. NO way I own an airplane where the FAA tells me Joe bag o donuts AP is supposed to unbolt my spar joints every 100 hours or every annual, and I get to eat a whole spar when they hamfist that spar bolt holes for the 5th or 6th time. Just like we let the roofer insurance ambulance chaser walk up to your roof with cleats and pinball hammer on and he never finds damage right?
If you could EC or dye inspect the thing without touching the bolts, cool. Examples that come to mind are the wide body 210s I'm looking at with the improved, no-replacement-required-every-1000hr saddles, which merely get dyed in place every annual but don't get touched otherwise. The Beech 33/35 spar web dye inspection is another one. But unbolting and re-assembling bolt on spar joints
every annual just to EC it? Hell no, I won't own a plane like that. It's a spar replacement being created by proxy, and I don't do manufactured demand, never mind is not in the interest of mine and my family's safety of flight.