I am using an alternate account to cover my real identity, as I do not want to make any accusations, nor offend anyone, until I am more confident and ready to start burning bridges.
My plane is (as of last week - WAS) on leaseback. It went in for a 100-hour, no issues observed by the mechanic. Few days later - alternator failure, and the plane went back to the mechanic for a few days.
The day that the alternator was replaced, and pretty much once the plane was ready for pickup, I get a phone call saying that there was definitely some type of a prop strike on my plane, very recently, and someone tried to cover it up. Propeller was bent back into place and the edges were filed down.
If you look closely at the pictures you will see what I am talking about
Just wanted to post this here to see if anyone had a similar experience. My gut tells me it was the mechanic himself, because no one is smart enough to have done such a thing on their own, and it's also not something that someone would've fixed so quickly. No one's kept the plane overnight or for a prolonged time between the last 100-hour and now. But I just don't know.
I did notice that during run up when you add some RPM, the front strut goes down a bit and the attitude decreases. I was thinking that this could be a factor, but more than one mechanic told me that the strut and tire can go flat and the prop will still not hit the ground. We had just added nitrogen in April, but I guess it's time for a refill?
Plane is now going for an engine inspection/teardown. Just a waste of time for no reason. We have insurance, and what's done is done, but at least whoever did it should man up.
I indirectly questioned the last few people who flew (example: how do you do your preflights? Tell me about how you inspect the prop. What did you see the last time you pre flighted) but no luck getting an admission.
Looking forward to your input based on the enclosed pictures. Maybe this isn't as bad as I thought. It would just suck to be planeless for the first summer that I actually own the plane.
Pics: http://imgur.com/a/8AKe5
EDIT: after reading some comments, I'm back to square one. Don't think it was the mechanic, but I did have to keep an open mind and not be too naive.
My plane is (as of last week - WAS) on leaseback. It went in for a 100-hour, no issues observed by the mechanic. Few days later - alternator failure, and the plane went back to the mechanic for a few days.
The day that the alternator was replaced, and pretty much once the plane was ready for pickup, I get a phone call saying that there was definitely some type of a prop strike on my plane, very recently, and someone tried to cover it up. Propeller was bent back into place and the edges were filed down.
If you look closely at the pictures you will see what I am talking about
Just wanted to post this here to see if anyone had a similar experience. My gut tells me it was the mechanic himself, because no one is smart enough to have done such a thing on their own, and it's also not something that someone would've fixed so quickly. No one's kept the plane overnight or for a prolonged time between the last 100-hour and now. But I just don't know.
I did notice that during run up when you add some RPM, the front strut goes down a bit and the attitude decreases. I was thinking that this could be a factor, but more than one mechanic told me that the strut and tire can go flat and the prop will still not hit the ground. We had just added nitrogen in April, but I guess it's time for a refill?
Plane is now going for an engine inspection/teardown. Just a waste of time for no reason. We have insurance, and what's done is done, but at least whoever did it should man up.
I indirectly questioned the last few people who flew (example: how do you do your preflights? Tell me about how you inspect the prop. What did you see the last time you pre flighted) but no luck getting an admission.
Looking forward to your input based on the enclosed pictures. Maybe this isn't as bad as I thought. It would just suck to be planeless for the first summer that I actually own the plane.
Pics: http://imgur.com/a/8AKe5
EDIT: after reading some comments, I'm back to square one. Don't think it was the mechanic, but I did have to keep an open mind and not be too naive.
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