H
HumbleGuest
Guest
I am a 100 hour private pilot who just experienced his first incident today. I've flown this rental Piper Archer 6 times and has taken it for many XCs, but today, I let my extreme excitement to demonstrate a class B transition to my newly-minted private pilot friend (and his friend) distract me as I was preflighting and, in act of complacency, I foolishly spun up the plane with the tow bar still attached to the nose-wheel.
Once I heard an abnormal, metallic-sounding noise, I immediately pulled back the mixture and shut everything down in the plane; I instantly knew what I screwed up on. When I got out, I noticed that only the tips of the two-blade propeller were damaged with one of them slightly shaven off and the other one bent, though they are still quite noticeable. The owner came out and didn't seem too bent up about the situation and even offered me one of his other plane for me to fly, but I felt extremely incompetent, so I decided to simply call it a day.
LESSON TO EVERYONE: Do another quick full walk-around of the aircraft after you complete everything on the preflight checklist!
My biggest question to the community is, what is the average of a complete replacement of a fixed-pitch propeller? I already gave the owner a hefty deposit. And is it required to be disclosed to the NTSB (already read NTSB 830 and believe it is not a disclosable incident)?
I believe the propeller that I damaged is a Sensenich 76EM8S5. I believe the engine may have to be inspected too since sudden stoppages caused by a prop strike could have potentially damaged it, but I didn't notice any drop in RPMs, although it may have been too quick for me to notice. The prop appeared to spin fine right after it hit the tow-bar.
Once I heard an abnormal, metallic-sounding noise, I immediately pulled back the mixture and shut everything down in the plane; I instantly knew what I screwed up on. When I got out, I noticed that only the tips of the two-blade propeller were damaged with one of them slightly shaven off and the other one bent, though they are still quite noticeable. The owner came out and didn't seem too bent up about the situation and even offered me one of his other plane for me to fly, but I felt extremely incompetent, so I decided to simply call it a day.
LESSON TO EVERYONE: Do another quick full walk-around of the aircraft after you complete everything on the preflight checklist!
My biggest question to the community is, what is the average of a complete replacement of a fixed-pitch propeller? I already gave the owner a hefty deposit. And is it required to be disclosed to the NTSB (already read NTSB 830 and believe it is not a disclosable incident)?
I believe the propeller that I damaged is a Sensenich 76EM8S5. I believe the engine may have to be inspected too since sudden stoppages caused by a prop strike could have potentially damaged it, but I didn't notice any drop in RPMs, although it may have been too quick for me to notice. The prop appeared to spin fine right after it hit the tow-bar.