Tom-D
Taxi to Parking
- Joined
- Feb 23, 2005
- Messages
- 34,740
- Display Name
Display name:
Tom-D
technically....yes, sudden stoppage. Practically it'll probably buff out.....Did the engine sustain sudden stoppage?
Refer to the engine manual if it did.
Refer to the propeller manual for the prop damage.
0-300-D / 172 tipped up during high wings, engine was spinning down with the mixture pulled.
it's about 1/8" th deep and 1/8" wide. McCauley 1A170 fixed pitch.
real picture
As I recall when I owned an O-300, if the prop must be removed to repair the damage, the engine needs to come apart. We went through that drill when I had the skull cap spinner come off in flight and get cut in half by the prop.
Can you properly repair it without removal? That would be the first question.
done.. we wait.Call the ins. co.
I'm not sure where you're going with this Tom, but regulations wise there is nothing you are forced to do on a Continental even if it was under power when the prop hit. Last I checked Continental does have a service bulletin on appropriate actions after a prop strike though, which is what I'd suggest consulting and following.
It was a polished prop. it will get done again.git yer buffer out Tom.....
If we have to ask about or question the potential need for internal damage, screw the guidance, tear it down? Maintenance has its own risks (maint induced failures), sure. But I only ask one question in trying to figure out what to do - what's the cost difference and is my life as a pilot/passenger or conscience as a mechanic worth that dollar amount.
@Bell206 I agree with everything you say. Your first sentence is the key. It's a personal decision.
I make my own decisions, and sometimes check myself by asking for input, then take action accordingly.
For me, money is not a decision factor. I would not have taken the plunge and bought this ****** money-pit dollar-sucker 40 year old plane if that were not true. I'm all-in now and will sell if I can't afford to maintain it to my own conservative safety standards or conscience (I sometimes hate living with myself, I'm such a PITA). Who knows, I may sell it by next summer (seriously); Everything I own is for sale all the time anyway...
(By the way, to be clear, I'm not an A&P, just a wrench monkey.)
C'mon, Did the prop hit one of your clients in the head? (just kidding)
Wow, I would spring for a new prop before I would fly around with something like that picture on the front of my bird!Just make sure to put a patch weight on other blade to keep it balanced.
hey....it's happened. I seen it.....Ouch. Low blow.
Do you see a 1A170 listed?From McCauley Manual MPC-26, page 610:
C. Blade Strike of Rotating Propeller (Refer to Figure 601).
(1) "Blade Strike", sometimes referred to as "Ground Strike", is defined as any impact or suspected
impact of the rotating propeller upon such items as, but not limited to, the ground, tow bars,
landing lights, carts, snow banks, hedges, etc. Please note that this definition is intended for
use as an example only. Determination as to whether or not a blade strike actually occurred is
ultimately the responsibility of the aircraft operator.
CAUTION: Internal damage can occur without evidence of gross external
damage.
(a) Any McCauley propeller experiencing a blade strike must be removed from the aircraft
and overhauled by an FAA approved Part 145 Propeller Repair Station or international
equivalent in accordance with the applicable overhaul manual. A hub must be declared
unairworthy and scrapped if any blade in the propeller assembly is bent beyond repair
limits below the 85% station.
I like the sentence "
Determination as to whether or not a blade strike actually occurred is
ultimately the responsibility of the aircraft operator.".
Places the responsibility (as far as McCauley is concerned) where it should be!
Nice to have a manual such as this, I think.
From McCauley Manual MPC-26, page 610:
C. Blade Strike of Rotating Propeller (Refer to Figure 601).
(1) "Blade Strike", sometimes referred to as "Ground Strike", is defined as any impact or suspected impact of the rotating propeller upon such items as, but not limited to, the ground, tow bars, landing lights, carts, snow banks, hedges, etc.
...no prop strike.
this is simply minor.
Whatever floats your boat....engine was spinning down...
it's about 1/8" th deep and 1/8" wide.
Next time your prop gets a nick, you best send it in for overhaul.
Next time your prop gets a nick, you best send it in for overhaul.
Yep, and we've all had a depth mike on this oneDepends on the size of the nick!
Do you see a piece missing ? Where ?If you don't like the replies, why do you post here? You are kind of a lightning rod. A nick and a piece out of the prop are two different things. No disrespect intended.
OP posted a picture and gave dimensions.Do you see a piece missing ? Where ?