whitepines
Pre-Flight
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- Aug 21, 2020
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whitepines
I have a Seneca II with an unusual failure I haven't really found anyone else mentioning online. Long story short, ~35 hours out from what was supposed to have been a thorough annual (DAR signoff afterward), the number 1 engine failed (stopped producing power*) on climbout. On landing, it was eventually discovered that the turbocharger had wiggled loose from its mounting bracket, trashing both the turbo and bracket.
Has anyone else heard of anything like this happening before on these engines / airframes? The safety wire was still intact, but the bolts were bent pretty badly and torn out of the housing. Otherwise the turbo itself was fine, the engine apparently stopped producing power because the turbo pulled apart the slip joints on the exhaust system when it came loose (no boost).
I guess I'm curious as to how this happened and what I, as the owner / pilot, could have feasibly done differently to avoid the engine failure* and expense of a new turbo. I can't think of any easy way to inspect it on preflight, and honestly "wiggle the turbocharger on each engine to see if it's loose" isn't something that would have even entered my thoughts before this debacle.
* Yes, the engine was probably producing a *little* bit of power still, but with No. 2 at cruise climb (35") and No. 1 suddenly reverting to natural aspiration at ~10k, it sure acted like the real deal! I chose to cage it pretty quickly since I didn't know what was wrong and didn't want to make a perfectly controllable situation worse (fire, etc.).
Has anyone else heard of anything like this happening before on these engines / airframes? The safety wire was still intact, but the bolts were bent pretty badly and torn out of the housing. Otherwise the turbo itself was fine, the engine apparently stopped producing power because the turbo pulled apart the slip joints on the exhaust system when it came loose (no boost).
I guess I'm curious as to how this happened and what I, as the owner / pilot, could have feasibly done differently to avoid the engine failure* and expense of a new turbo. I can't think of any easy way to inspect it on preflight, and honestly "wiggle the turbocharger on each engine to see if it's loose" isn't something that would have even entered my thoughts before this debacle.
* Yes, the engine was probably producing a *little* bit of power still, but with No. 2 at cruise climb (35") and No. 1 suddenly reverting to natural aspiration at ~10k, it sure acted like the real deal! I chose to cage it pretty quickly since I didn't know what was wrong and didn't want to make a perfectly controllable situation worse (fire, etc.).
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