brcase
En-Route
What does the mechanic you will use to maintain it and comply with the next annual think about the aircraft? He's the one who will let you know about any red flags now or let you know in a year.
What does the mechanic you will use to maintain it and comply with the next annual think about the aircraft? He's the one who will let you know about any red flags now or let you know in a year.
..."comes with a fresh annual" is kind of a marketing gimmick ...
I time my oil changes by the amount used. 1 qt in 50 hours.?? What is driving the "650h left"?
Wow. Really? I don't know much about engines, but this seems surprisingly low to me.
Good luck with your experience! Plane ownership has been great for me.
I've had a Warrior II (-161) for over 20 years. It has four seats, but it's really a 2-person plane. I've head 4 people in it once. All of us were well under the FAA average American. To stay below MGW with full fuel, the 3 passengers were allowed 5 pounds of luggage. The pilot got 10. Our trip was planned for one night, but was extended to two. Got stuck in Hillsboro, OR where we stayed the night at a Red Lion and were treated to a Pit Bull convention the next day.
The point is, the -151, -161, and I would add the -181 are all 2-person planes. IMO, the first truly 4-person planes in the PA-28 line are the -235 and the Dakota (-236).
Hi Tobias,
do an AD search here https://ad.easa.europa.eu/search/advanced/result/
and verify all of them are signed off in the logs.
The PA28 Spar design is something coming more and more into focus. It’s a fatigue/structural issue. Nothing to be alarmed but it is good to know about it (minuscule influence compared to other accidents, for now).
[..] long text removed - thanks!! [..]
The Hershey bar Cherokees (140, 150, 160, 180) aren’t affected. The tapered wing models (151, 161, 181) are, as are all Arrows. Some quote from a letter of an NTSB person circulating the web calls the 28-235 as most prone to spar failure.
Long story short, an eddy current might be a good idea, especially on a plane based at a grass field. The PA28 gear goes straight to the spar as I’m sure you know.
You can declare an AMP based on MIP acc. Part-ML and skip a lot of unnecessary costs. There’s no limit to running anything on condition, apart from ADs and airworthiness limitations (the PA28 has none).
Reading your story, especially about the current owners, my feeling is you have the chance to buy a great, economical plane.
Happy to connect if you want to exchange more info!
Doing the prop is no big deal. Do it because it's on the list of things to do, but I wouldn't lose any sleep over it provided that it looks with nothing but minor defects.
At 35 hours, you could change the oil. This is the that for my climate I go from straight weight to multi vis anyway.
The missing log book is a bargaining chip, but would be irrelevant to my consideration. You can see if the airframe is straight. If so, there's likely nothing in that logbook anyway.
Sounds like you're going all the right things. Good luck! Sounds like you have a winner.