My Mooney is used in my business, but even if it weren't I want a reliable plane. Virtually any thing that isn't right is fixed immediately. No waiting for the next annual for me.
But an hour ago my son called me from KBLM in northern New Jersey. He was flying from Hartford, CT back to Atlanta and didn't make it very far. The low voltage alarm on the engine monitor came on, followed by the low voltage annunciator light. The ammeter was showing a large discharge. He made the correct decision to land at the nearest suitable airport.
Fortunately, there was a maintenance shop there that took a look and diagnosed a bad alternator. One was ordered for overnight delivery from Spruce, and he should be back on his way tomorrow. However, there's a high cost to fixing things on the road. I figure 3X what it would cost to do it in my hangar on my time schedule.
Two or three years ago we had a starter fail in Illinois, many hours away from home and went through the same hassle.
So what should one do? This alternator was only 4 years, 4 months old. Does anyone replace these essential accessories on a time or flight hour basis? If so, how would one establish what that time period should be? Or do most people wait for things like this to fail and live with the inconvenience of a failure on the road?
Ideas? Anybody a Mike Busch client? I wonder what he says about this.
But an hour ago my son called me from KBLM in northern New Jersey. He was flying from Hartford, CT back to Atlanta and didn't make it very far. The low voltage alarm on the engine monitor came on, followed by the low voltage annunciator light. The ammeter was showing a large discharge. He made the correct decision to land at the nearest suitable airport.
Fortunately, there was a maintenance shop there that took a look and diagnosed a bad alternator. One was ordered for overnight delivery from Spruce, and he should be back on his way tomorrow. However, there's a high cost to fixing things on the road. I figure 3X what it would cost to do it in my hangar on my time schedule.
Two or three years ago we had a starter fail in Illinois, many hours away from home and went through the same hassle.
So what should one do? This alternator was only 4 years, 4 months old. Does anyone replace these essential accessories on a time or flight hour basis? If so, how would one establish what that time period should be? Or do most people wait for things like this to fail and live with the inconvenience of a failure on the road?
Ideas? Anybody a Mike Busch client? I wonder what he says about this.
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