DaleB
Final Approach
Some time next week I'll be looking at a potential restoration project. I've never dealt with a tube & fabric airplane before. Never owned one, never flown one, heck I've never even sat in one. So this will be some fresh ground for me.
The plane is disassembled, the fabric is off (but saved), repairs complete from some earlier damage. The owner claims everything is ready for fabric; I'm not counting on that.
My desire is to make sure that it doesn't have any show-stopping defects, there are no repairs needed that I'm not willing to tackle (or have tackled for me), etc. I have a mental list of things to check for:
The plane is disassembled, the fabric is off (but saved), repairs complete from some earlier damage. The owner claims everything is ready for fabric; I'm not counting on that.
My desire is to make sure that it doesn't have any show-stopping defects, there are no repairs needed that I'm not willing to tackle (or have tackled for me), etc. I have a mental list of things to check for:
- Spars - inspect for cracks, evidence of compression stress, varnish, overall condition, wear around mount bushings
- Wings - Check for any bent, corroded or obviously un-airworthy ribs, drag wires, braces, etc.
- Fuselage & tail - Check for rust, ping with a blunt spring-loaded punch to check for internal corrosion
- Measure fuse for squareness where it should be square
- All bits and pieces present including data plate, logbooks, documentation
- Check prop for cracks, damage, etc.
- Engine - well, I really don't care much, to be honest. Should all be there though.
- One or two common defects known specifically on this type, gleaned from web forums and stuff documented over the years.
- Instruments - I'm just going to assume I'll need to replace them; if they're good, it's a big fat bonus.