hindsight2020
Final Approach
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- Apr 3, 2010
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hindsight2020
Ah the joys of hangar rash. Get a call today by the FBO, a day later I just found out. So chucklehead dropped a toolbox from second floor of hangar right onto the right rear portion of my Arrow's wing, oopsie ("Sorry, Robert..$5 dollars doesn't buy my undivided attention") . Punched an 8 inch crater through the top skin, rear spar nicely dented ("the box only had airplane cleaner bottles" they said...LOL), aileron damaged. It might have missed the ribs, but we won't know until my AP peels out the skin and takes a look. Depending on how long it takes to get a replacement rear spar and whether or not the PA-28 has a 2-piece rear spar (it looks like it does, but we're consulting the PA-28 parts manual), it looks like the month of October is down for the count. Happy birthday week to me.
There goes my 100% mx dispatch record. Everything comes to an end I suppose
Bronze colored pieces on bottom of rear spar are the aileron gap seals. Pictures show the rear spar and top skin with the aileron removed. Let's just say a cardboard box doesn't buckle a rear spar like that . I will say, THIS is why I prefer to own a PA-28 over a Mooney or Comanche. Lineman buffoonery unfortunately happens, but this at least keeps it from becoming a Smithsonian curator scavenger hunt over a simpleton flying scooter.
She'll fly again, and I don't mind the cosmetics, but the structural components will get fixed correctly. I fly the family on this thing and if there is anything about this entire situation that did affront me, it was the initial insinuation that the spar could be repaired in-place in lieu of replacement cost and labor. That narrative lasted about a second before I put an end to it on the phone. I think my community hangar days are coming to an end.
There goes my 100% mx dispatch record. Everything comes to an end I suppose
Bronze colored pieces on bottom of rear spar are the aileron gap seals. Pictures show the rear spar and top skin with the aileron removed. Let's just say a cardboard box doesn't buckle a rear spar like that . I will say, THIS is why I prefer to own a PA-28 over a Mooney or Comanche. Lineman buffoonery unfortunately happens, but this at least keeps it from becoming a Smithsonian curator scavenger hunt over a simpleton flying scooter.
She'll fly again, and I don't mind the cosmetics, but the structural components will get fixed correctly. I fly the family on this thing and if there is anything about this entire situation that did affront me, it was the initial insinuation that the spar could be repaired in-place in lieu of replacement cost and labor. That narrative lasted about a second before I put an end to it on the phone. I think my community hangar days are coming to an end.
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