FLEngineer
Filing Flight Plan
- Joined
- Nov 23, 2021
- Messages
- 18
- Display Name
Display name:
FLEngineer
Not necessarily. Like previously mentioned, it could be from rough ground handling. Or it could be from something more. What did the pre-buy reveal. Any damage history? What did the person doing the pre-buy think?So I assume seeing this would make most walk away from the aircraft purchase?
What year/model? Regardless its doubtful that way off the line. While can't make out much details from pic, in general, Cessna considers most smooth dents as negligible damage with several qualifiers. A quick check/opinion of the interior skin/bulkheads/stringers by your APIA (not prebuy guy) will provide the needed input. If you want to take it one step further you can also check the tailcone alignment.Could these wrinkles have existed straight from manufacture?
Update: Owner has stated it was from his hands while struggling to put the cover on during a windy day.
One quick test... Attach a string to the outside edge of one flap and stretch it until it touches the horizontal stabilizer near the tip. Mark the length on the string.
Take that same string and attach to the other flap and stretch it to the same place on the other horizontal stabilizer. If the length of string is different, then the airframe is bent. Just a simple check. Not conclusive, but if the measurements are different you have a problem.
Prebuy went very well outside of this. The A&P definitely did not find any signs of damage or damage repair. Also no damage history in the records. He wasn't sure what caused it, but since it was in two places on that left side he theorized that it might be possible it came that way from factory. The two places are within arm's reach, so I guess it's possible someone might have been pressing on the outside at some point.
I looked at a Cherokee a few years ago with similar wrinkles. It was one of the one's with the beacon up on top of the tail like an old timey police car light. The "hangar" the plane was in had a low crossbeam near the entry and when the owner was pushing/pulling through the hangar entry with the nose more compressed than usual the beacon caught that beam and caused that torsion/wrinkles. If it can happen from catching on top like that, I'm sure tail strikes could do it too.Could a tail strike cause that?