brien23
Cleared for Takeoff
Does TBO on part 91 flying club flight training limit the time on the engine to TBO? I thought TBO was more of a Part 135 limit?
I had always heard, and believed, that anecdote.
I went searching for any reference in the FAR and couldn't find one. Only thing I think could ever apply is if a 121, 135, or 141 operation had that in their approved ops specs.
I have a plane (LSA) in leaseback to a flight school and they stated that for their part 61, the engine can go past TBO as long as it passed the 100hr inspection. With that being said, they stated when they shift to a Part 141, the engine much be overhauled or replaced at TBO.
While FAA regs may not require overhaul at TBO, I have heard of insurance companies requiring Part 91 training operations to overhaul at TBO to maintain full coverage.
Just a thought to double check your insurance policy.
While FAA regs may not require overhaul at TBO, I have heard of insurance companies requiring Part 91 training operations to overhaul at TBO to maintain full coverage.
Just a thought to double check your insurance policy.
While FAA regs may not require overhaul at TBO, I have heard of insurance companies requiring Part 91 training operations to overhaul at TBO to maintain full coverage.
Just a thought to double check your insurance policy.
Umm... I don't think you can deduct such reserves. What you can do is consider a TBO to have a definite useful life and use that to determine a depreciation deduction which may offset some of that.While I agree with the FAA interpretations mentioned, there could be a tax implication.
If you are reserving for overhaul based on TBO (let's say $30k to overhaul at TBO of 2k hours = $15/hr reserve) that $15/hr is an expense that can be currently deducted from revenue, but if you're not making metal and the engine runs to 2.5k hours you should not be deducting the last $7,500 from revenue. Unless of course you reassess the expected overhaul cost to $37.5 and get that new estimation blessed with your CPA.
Umm... I don't think you can deduct such reserves. What you can do is consider a TBO to have a definite useful life and use that to determine a depreciation deduction which may offset some of that.