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Showing content with the highest reputation on 12/03/2016 in all areas

  1. Sorry but I'm not sure that was unreasonable. I assume you really were not prepared to go buy a tube & tire from ASpruce and you did not have tools to block up the nose gear, remove the wheel, split the rims, lube, inflate and mount the tube.tire, torque the bolts, etc. A business marking up parts from inventory that they have to keep and charging for their time at their shop rate seems reasonable to me. Maybe that A&P was sitting there waiting for you to need emergency service but more likely they pulled him off a job for a regular customer to deal with a transient. Maybe we need a AAA for airplanes. OTOH, I had a flat tire @ KOSH this year. $275 under the circumstances would have been very acceptable. It turns out that KOSH is probably the best possible place to need help. Volunteers towed the plane to their maintenance pen where I was able to tie down over night, I went by A.Spruce hangar and bought a tube and helped Dave Staffeldt install it. We checked out a whole box of tools from the maintenance shop. Dave wouldn't take anything for what I'm sure was more than an hour and there was no charge for the other services. I was more than delighted to put $40 in their tool kitty jar. I think the Michelin Air Stop tube was $80. so it cost me $120. I was still smiling when the Caravan powers to be decreed my handle would be "Breakdown". BICBW
    10 points
  2. One thing I've learn while getting old is that there are not enough people who have real knowledge and experience and who also are willing to get their hands dirty. When you find one it is a very good idea to appreciate him/her. I have a local A&P/IA, a plumber, a welder, an electrician, an upholsterer, a seamstress... all of whom do not charge enough for what their expertise is really worth,
    8 points
  3. I'm still in shock from reading this statement. Unless they had a team of a six mechanics working eight straight hours with the precision of an Indy pit crew, these are what is known as a "paper annual".
    5 points
  4. My problem it takes me 2 weeks to rebuild a nose wheel and change said tire and tube. Lol. I had a scalloped tire, unknown tube that always wanted air, and some light damage on my wheel half retaining clip housing. Decided to replace the wheel with a used wheel I found on barnstormers. $125 killer deal. New was $650. Came with a serviceable tire and tube, slap it on No problem right?... Well I better check the bearings... Shot. Ordered new PMA'd races and bearings. Those things are expensive. $55 bearings $30 races. Decided to replace the hardware too. Refinish the wheel assy, cleaned light surface corrosion, used pre-kote treatment. $30. first paint job bubbled in the oven. Re-do. Found a better silver high temp. Looks great. $20 in paint and hardware. $165 Goodyear tire from ASC, $75 Michelin tube. Still need to replace one helicoil for my wheel cover. All in all, it looks about as nice as the refinished jet wheels for work I get from Aviall. The ability show fellow mooney guys my hard work... Priceless. Lol. $275 to get you down the road at F70 is a deal!! -Matt
    5 points
  5. Well, I just finished up my 5th annual since owning my J. I decided to use a new shop since my other annuals were always done in a day and I felt they were not as thorough as they should or coupld be. After some searching and upon the advice of a couple Mooneyspacers I went with Crownair Aviation in San Diego Montgomery Field (KMYF). I scheduled to drop off my plane on Oct 24th but that got delayed just days prior due to an ongoing problem with my dual mag. After getting that repaired I was able to drop it off on Oct 31st. Crownair was very accommodating and agreed to do the annual even though I missed my drop off window by a week. This led to the annual taking over a month and I finally picked it up on Dec 2nd with a Dec 1st sign off (This was something the shop and I agreed to since the plane wasn't going to be ready until Nov 28th anyways). I want to add that I feel like my plane is in very good condition, not perfect, but I am proactive about maintenance and fix issues as they come up. Within the last year I have IRAN'd the mags, OH'd the prop, repaired a faulty dual mag, repaired a cracked upper cowl, replaced the ignition switch and p-leads, among other minor issues. Point being I don't let things stay broke very long so I felt like the plane was in decent shape going into the annual. The basic inspection was quoted around $2,100. This is double what I usually spend in labor alone in my previous annuals (Not including parts). I was thinking the annual would end up being maybe $3,000 but surely no more than $4,000. I was even prepared to stomach $5k if it came to that. After they did the initial inspection was completed they emailed me a list of 65 tasks, which included the discrepancies. Not all of the discrepancies were mandatory or airworthy. Some were "tires worn out." I felt my tires were still fine and probably could have gone at 6-12 more months before needing replacement but I decided to "throw them a bone" so to speak, and let them replace the mains. And since they were replacing the mains I told them to go ahead and replace the nose tire too. Other issues were discussed and I was given approximate costs, over the phone, on how much other discrepancies would cost to be addressed. I gave approval on certain ones such as replacing the cotter pins in the seat rails with the correct size. I finally got the invoice emailed to me yesterday which came out to a whopping $6,006. I was a little shocked to say the least. Most of the costs were reasonable such as an hour to change each tire but some seemed a bit skewed. Such as .5 hours @ $88 hour to change those 4 said seat rail cotter pins. I've done this before and I can say this takes about 2 minutes to change all 4 cotter pins. I was charged 1.5 hours to change the oil. Something I can personally do in about 30 minutes with the cowl removed and change filters and I'm not a professional A&P by any stretch of the word. Personally I feel the hardest part of changing the oil is removing the cowlings by myself but they come off as part of the inspection so the actual oil and filter change should be easy and quick. I also got charged .25 hours (15 minutes) to take an oil sample. Again, something that takes a couple minutes. Another issue I saw was being charged 1 hour of labor to secure the landing light wiring and fire sleeve from chafing on the exhaust. I brought these billing issues up during the pick up. I was told the smallest increment of time they can bill for is 15 minutes. I was also explained why it could take 30 minutes to change the cotter pins because the mechanic "has to go get the cotter pins, put them in and log it." The logbook entry referencing that task was about 6 words. Now I'm not writing this only to complain as they did address and repair some other issues I was not aware of and I'm glad they did that. The costs on some of those seemed reasonable but the costs on tires seemed excessive. I was billed $160 for a nose wheel that costs $99.50 at Spruce. The mains were also more than Spruce. Had I known this before I would have declined the tires and had my local field mechanic do the work at $70 hr and bought the tires myself. Pros about this shop: Very friendly, professional and complete service Cons: Not providing better estimates on costs to fix discrepancies but this could also partially be my fault. All this being said I wish I had a better idea and more information before choosing this shop which is why I'm writing this. I'm happy with the work they did just not so happy with the billing. Before choosing the shop I asked them what the average annual costs on a J like mine. He would not answer or even give me a ballpark. I wasn't trying to nail him down to a number I just wanted to know what the average Joe Shmoe pays for an average annual on a plane like mine. I even told him I wouldn't expect that to be what mine could cost because I'm aware of the variables. Still wouldn't give me an answer. That should have been a sign right there. Anyways, I hope this helps someone in the future. Any questions feel free to ask. Steve
    3 points
  6. I have to stick in my 2 cents. Nobody here (at least I hope nobody here) is saying "I'm a better pilot than you because I have an instrument rating". I know a bunch of VFR guys who are much better pilots than I am. All of us who got the rating are proud of the fact that we went to the effort to get it, and know it improved our abilities. If you get your IR, you will be a better pilot than you were before you did. I don't think anyone would argue with the fact that having your IR improves your ability to utilize your plane for trips, but it is a pain to maintain currency, and it may not be worth it to you.
    3 points
  7. Amen Clarence!!! If paying shop rates and parts markups are too much, either invest how ever many thousands of dollars and time it takes to get your A&P, buy your stock and do the work your self, or sell the airplane. If a 160 dollar tire away from home gets you, there's no way your ready for a broken crank on the road. Just the hanger space rental could hurt your feelings. We spend tens of thousands of dollars on radios and shiny spiny things we really could do without, but when it comes to maintaining a safe reliable aircraft the first question is what's it gonna cost me. There are shops that truly rip people off, for example. A 172 goes back to the same facility 12 hours and 12 months later, 12,000 dollars. True story. But an extra 1000.00 dollars on an annual for a high performance retract is like spending ten bucks more at the grocery store. It's all relative . A 6 grand annual isn't bad, especially at a new shop were they start over on the research. Every time a new facility is used your paying for another look back at all history events. We have picked an expensive hobby that can't be justified for any reason other than it's the most awesome thing ever.
    3 points
  8. Late entry for 2016 I just found looking through a folder. From back in February. Appropriate as getting ready for the winter here in New England. Love the climb performance in the cool crisp winter air. This was an early morning breakfast run to Nancy's Airfield Cafe at Minute Man Air Field (6B6) with my youngest, Will (10). Great food there and, yes, he finished both plates. (To clarify, the flying pics are departure and landing from home airport (KBVY - Beverly, MA).
    3 points
  9. The mid-air stats are very interesting. I suppose most are in VMC and in the vicinity of an airport but that would be nice to know. On board traffic info sure looks helpful to me - there is a lot more traffic displayed than spotted. The rarity of engine failure is helpful as we weigh the real risks of single engine instrument, night flying, over water or other inhospitable terrain.
    2 points
  10. Thanks for boiling down my post to your opinion that I shouldn't own an airplane Clarence. Did you even read my entire post? Not sure if you did or did not but I'll summarize that the reason I posted it was to give someone in my position an idea on what to expect in a similar situation. I didn't find any posts about Crownair Aviation so this was partially a shop review documenting my experience. I didn't bash the shop or speak negatively about their work. I just questioned some of their billing practices, time to complete tasks and stated what I thought about their parts mark ups. Some of us Mooney owners are "frugal" to say the least. Had I known they marked up their tires that much I would have declined it and had my local guy done it and saved some money doing it. A shop owner is absolutely allowed to make a profit. I believe in a free market and not socialism so no issues there. However, as owners we have a right to manage maintenance costs and safety doesn't have to be compromised in the process. I felt I was nickled and dimed on some (not all) of the billing. Being billed for 30 minutes for something that takes 2 is unreasonable to me and it becomes an issue when the bill is higher than I expected. Being billed $22 to take an oil sample also seems unreasonable. That's almost the cost of the test itself. If the bill came out to $3,500 I probably wouldn't even have mentioned it. And I'm not saying I wasn't happy with the work as they found issues with the plane I was not aware of. I just wish I had been given better communication on what the costs were adding up to so it wasn't such a shock when I got the final invoice. I didn't know what certain things were going to cost until they were done. Is this my fault, yes, I'll say it partially is but perhaps the next guy can learn from this. But I guess questioning some billing means I shouldn't own an airplane, right? I guess I should just open up my check book and let them fill in the amount and just smile. Steve
    2 points
  11. A Mooney will always beat a 182 on speed at the same fuel flow, too. Even my C will outrun a 182, and I do it on 9 gph . . . An R182 may keep up, but it will take 50% more fuel.
    2 points
  12. Just bought a RAM iPad mini package mount for $68 bucks at Aircraft Spruce. Works great in portrait or landscape. Better than an older RAM mount I had on co pilot yoke. Does not block instruments. Simple elegant and reasonable price.
    2 points
  13. You can buy an Ovation if you wanna be fastest from 0-8k feet. You can buy a Bravo or Acclaim if you want to be fastest above 8k. Either way the Mooney is faster. Pick your poison. Sent from my iPhone using Tapatalk
    2 points
  14. I do owner assist annuals. I have accumulated almost all the tools and supplies needed including jacks and tail weight, 5 hp air compressor, kerosene heater. I have quite a lot of experience taking apart everything need for the inspection. Jacking the plane, removing seats, cowling,, inspection plates, wheels, spark plugs, draining oil, removing the oil filter, cleaning the wheel wells and belly, lubing the heim bearings, removing the battery, topping the hydraulic reservoir, and a few more prep tasks I'm leaving out is a pretty full day (4-6 hours, I'm old and I have a life away from the airport). And I'll reverse all those steps after the actual inspection, measuring, adjusting, bearing repacking... is done by Lynn with me playing dental assistant, fetching mirrors, magnets, assorted wrenches, salves and potions. At this point we might find we need a part or two that needs replacing that neither of us has in stock. I might be told I can button up some of the dismantling. After the parts are secured and installed I can add oil, filter, do safety wiring and put the plane back together. Lynn checks the ELT battery date, the AD and SB history (at this point there are zero or very few that apply to a '66E) and logs the work. We've done it in 3 days when I had a trip planned but usually I take closer to 2 weeks. If we punched a clock i/o I'd only log 25-30 hours on task of which <10 are Lynn's. This year we'll replace the JBar block which is original. I want to remove and straighten a gear door, may need painting. do some other touch up painting. I would estimate that the money I save more than pays for the difference in hangar cost for my private T hangar vs. being in one of the community hangars.
    2 points
  15. that 45 min flight will take longer with all the overhead / security gates / arriving early / boarding time. door-door you will be faster on that train.
    2 points
  16. A while ago, I had a shop doing an annual and additional work on my Mooney M20F. I was wondering about their prices for parts. They explained me that they add 30 percent to the prices they pay. For that amount of money they keep a lot of parts in stock and have them ready, when you need them. Also they guarantee that the parts are working fine. After that experience, I started buying most of the parts myself, including oil, filter ... and bring them with the plane to a shop. In May, I experienced a vacuum pump failure during flight. I was already enroute to a Mooney shop. My first question after landing was: Do you have the pump available. He had a new one ready on his shelf and installed it immediately. In this situation, I was happy and had no problems to pay more money for the pump as at Spruce. In regard to the annual inspection, my IA gives me a detailed list of discrepancies with information, if it is more or less important to fix those things. The list comes also with information about time to fix it and prices for parts. Then it is up to me to order what I want and there are no surprises in the final bill.
    2 points
  17. I hope you're kidding, sometimes I have a hard time reading between the lines.
    2 points
  18. I have had worse. I took my first J to LASAR for its first Annual. "They are the best." That may be true- but they arnt the most reasonable. Double digits... well into double digits. Similar experience. Great people-know their mooneys... but they charge a HEFTY premium for that knowledge and reputation.
    2 points
  19. I've given three interested pilots, rides in my Mooney. All three of them now are Mooney owners. Not a bad average
    2 points
  20. My buddy flies a Citation Sovereign for a living. It is based in Tampa but was at the Cessna Service Center at Orlando International and was ready to be picked up. My Mooney was ready to be picked up from the avionics shop at Orlando-Sanford 21 nm north. So we drove a rental to KSFB to pick up my bird then I dropped him off at KMCO. Here is a picture of 88V in front of the Cessna Service Center and a ramp full of Citation Jets. Interior pics of the Sovereign. Golfing legend and fellow aviator gone west, Arnold Palmers Citation.
    2 points
  21. Also, thank you for helping out all of my endless questions over at pilotsofamerica.com I hope I can return the favor someday!
    2 points
  22. There are plenty of quality/solid airframes around that have not been updated much, if at all. So long as you go into such a plane knowing that putting $50k into a $60k plane typically results in an $80k plane when it is time to sell, then you won't be disappointed. However, if you wish to build your dream plane (like Bennett) and own/fly it for a long time, then you'll "get" your money out if it in enjoyment over many years. Starting with an un-upgraded plane in this case is great because paying for newer paint or interior that you want to change is silly. Ditto for one with a 430W if you ultimately want a GTN instead. Just figure out what you ultimately want, and how long you might own it. Personally I think the J (and perhaps K) fit a real sweet spot in terms of useful speed and range, low operating cost, and reasonable purchase price. To go measurably faster or carry a lot more at similar speeds requires s LOT more in purchase and/or operating cost. Point bring you might not "outgrow" a Mooney and thus building a great one might be a great long-term decision. Sent from my VS985 4G using Tapatalk
    2 points
  23. I bought a 78J in 2014, I bought it for less than 70K BUT... its avionics and interior were dated, it desperately needed an upgrade. Which I did within a year. Its engine had 1600 hrs, I'm currently at 1950 and God willing I plan on going well past TBO. The first annual and first year maintenance cost was 10K which included new landing pucks, muffler, overhauled gear actuator, all new hoses, new spark plugs, overhauled mags, and new LED lights. Only the muffler and hoses was unexpected. ...so would have it been better to pay more upfront? No Js for sale had modern avionics (GTN xxx, JPI 8xx, etc), so I got the what I wanted, how I wanted it. No Js had LED lights... Owners are reluctant to spend money on maintenance when they aren't flying or selling, so most will need some major investment in the first year. Logs will tell you the story. The more hours I put on the engine, the better deal I got. PPIs help, but there are no guarantees. Rule of thumb is you need 10% cash in reserve for 1st year maintenance....I would use 15% if plane is less than 100K.
    2 points
  24. True to Mooney Speed, this little guy arrived a few weeks early on my birthday. He is doing well.
    2 points
  25. We don't have a "don't like" button, but that's pretty lame. A guy wants to fly an airplane and be safe as he can and you call him what? Screw this macho crap.
    2 points
  26. +1, and also: -you like working on it -you have friends at your airport and like helping them work on their airplanes -you have a fridge at your hangar and you like just relaxing on a nice evening with a beer There are a lot of things to enjoy about being an airplane owner, but financially justifying the expense isn't one of them. (24 year airplane owner)
    2 points
  27. As one that has owned 14 airplanes in my flying career and had a $25k annual on an airplane that had an extensive ($10k) pre-buy by the guru of that aircraft type and had the annual done by the same individual - listen to Andy. I see a lot of fantasy and justification by the OP that will be quite eye opening once the reality and expense of aircraft ownership sets in. Ownership is more expensive than renting in 99% of cases and the OP is not the 1% exception. You own for pride of ownership, immediate and absolute availability of the airplane, known maintenance and condition or to fly an airplane that isn't readily available on the rental line. YOU DO NOT OWN AN AIRPLANE TO SAVE MONEY OVER RENTING !!!
    2 points
  28. In the Mooney, there would have been plenty of time to leisurely fly a normal pattern as you would have easily outrun the storm at a normal cruise speed
    2 points
  29. The first flight in my K 252, a Bo was within 5 miles, same altitude, from Memphis to San Marcos. We landed within 5 minutes of each other. Same altitude, same speed, same track. I burned 40 gal, he burned 52 gal.
    1 point
  30. That all depends on the shop/A&P; I'd say. there are those that think $5000.00 is perfectly reasonable for an annual, as this thread has exposed. And others that don't. my biggest issue in the past has been being billed $110.00 / hr shop rates by a "reputable shop", then picking up my plane only to find multiple issues... like spark plugs only hand tightened, and a condition lever rod bent, so that the prop cable would stick after engine mount shimming. Needless to say- my plane will never go to that place again. I honestly hope that my aircraft was an anomaly at an otherwise reputable shop. there are those that would rather have a big shop take care of their plane, or a famous MSC that does lots of business and are happy to throw money that direction. Personally, I like having a local A&P that I know, and trust. An A&P that has met my wife and kids, and can put their faces to my plane.... not just another "mooney in a string of mooney's.".... But I'm lucky to have found that kind of a person, and to have access to their skill set.
    1 point
  31. 1 point
  32. And I do 175 or more on 13.... QED Sent from my iPhone using Tapatalk
    1 point
  33. Hi Bob, When I talked with Hartzell at Osh, I asked about the viability of repairing a crack like yours as I was looking at buying a spinner on EBay and was advised it's not repairable. I hope there's some warranty consideration given for yours. David
    1 point
  34. Don't forget about the liability and why should he be able to buy insurance so that his kids don't starve when some dumb ass pilot buys the farm and widow includes the mechanic in the suit.
    1 point
  35. I always enjoy reading those quirky English expressions from Andrew. This one left me stumped so I was able to find this translation for us English, er American speaking fellows from across the pond: [singular/uncountable] behaviour that is rude or does not show respect, especially towards someone who is older or more important. I've had enough of your cheek. have the cheek to do something: He had the cheek to suggest that I should be the one to apologize!
    1 point
  36. What they didn't tell you is they can NC items (no charge), my MSC does it with small items like your cotter pins (removal,installed) should be part of the inspection process.
    1 point
  37. Should be a great day for a flight. Light winds, decent weather. Sent from my iPad using Tapatalk
    1 point
  38. I think this may be the first time I have seen EGT charts for an O360... 1) EGT #4 seems to be running a bit differently than the others. 2) the mag check occurs so quickly compared to the data acquisition speed, you can see a mag check happened but the results aren't very clear. (If you take more time, it will show two separate peaks and returns to normal with both mags running. It takes six seconds to acquire a datapoint on a standard JPI set-up... going 15 seconds per mag will collect more data (if you can stomach the rough ground run) 3) what I was hoping to discern was... the effects of the secondary fuel nozzle. It comes on at full throttle and comes off when the throttle is backed off just a bit. I think I see it happen... 4) Leaning... appears, but not incredibly visible. 5) If you annotate a time line, it may look something like this... 00:00 engine start, cylinders begin heating... 3:00 - 6:00 mag check and prop tests... 6:00 - 10:00 taxi to runway... 10:30 There is an interesting signature of the throttle all the way out for a few seconds. Or mixture going full rich... 11:00 Game-on... full throttle, EGTs go skywards. #4 leads the pack stronger than the others... 13:00 Something interesting is occurring... possibly the secondary fuel nozzle gets cut off. EGTs take a step higher and continue upwards as if the pilot is leaning the mixture... 14:00 - 18:00 Leaning appears to be going on in this time frame 18:00 - 29:00 Steady as she goes, mate... egt#4 runs noticeably colder than the other three. 29:00 - 33:00 Slight rise in all EGTs 33:00 - All EGTs begin to cool, throttle has been pulled for descent...? All but #4! Who is a bit chilly already... 36:00 - 38:00 traffic pattern activity, low throttle position, cool EGTs... GUMPS puts the mixture all the way in... 38:00 throttle pulled for landing procedure... Taxiing and shut down... Take a second look at EGT #4, it behaves differently than the others. Could be the oddness of a carburetor. Or might be an induction air leak adding to the behavior. It has some of the sawtooth I was expecting to match up with the photo of the mal-behaved valve. Take a second look at CHT #2, it is just running hotter than the others. Look for reasons airflow may be escaping... Always verify the EGT#s correlate with the cylinder numbers. PP thoughts, most liking missing the proper details. It would be interesting to take a flight and go through all of these steps again. Take notes at the time of each throttle and mixture adjustment, engine flaps open and close too... Best regard, -a-
    1 point
  39. Got my first Mooney in 1998 and the IR in 2000. I always file IFR. It makes it easy to get through complex airspace, such as the DC SFRA.
    1 point
  40. Here is a DG with heading bug, non-autopilot. You would think it would be less than one that has an autopilot pick-up. I'm doing instrument training as well and I think the heading bug is a big help. It might be worth the extra expense if you will be flying approaches in the soup. http://www.chiefaircraft.com/rca-11d-7.html
    1 point
  41. When does in error? If you are doing approaches and going around in the pattern a lot, then that is normal. Accelerating and climbing after a stabilized approach usually gives me 20 degrees or so error Ina matter if just a few seconds after missing. Especially if your turning while climbing back out. If it holds pretty good in level flight at stable speed, then it should be fine. If if there are wires going to that fitting, then it is a suction switch that will turn your vac light on.
    1 point
  42. Actually probably anyone in Florida with a Mooney would be happy to give you a ride in one. If you're ever in Texas, I'd be happy to give you a ride in mine.
    1 point
  43. Trust me, many, many, many, many Chinese and European people would love to drive their own car. Not to mention own plane. The neighbor's grass is alway greener.
    1 point
  44. It's even got enough resolution to read the Lycoming part number. Sent from my iPad using Tapatalk
    1 point
  45. I like the inflight mag check but agree that having it quit on one side would be hair raising. If that happens on the carb'd plane, one also has to remember to pull the throttle well back before returning to the good side to prevent a backfire. I don't think the issue with #2 exhaust is far enough along to see on the EGT trace- my impression is that this is a fairly advanced sign. But the borescope view is pretty damning. I did have Savvy look a little while ago. I think it's a good tool, but honestly I am skeptical how sensitive looking at EGT alone is - when you see the oscillating pattern, it is alarming but may give false security if normal. I'm thinking my #2 cyl. should come off based on the borescope view alone. But here's a link to a recent flight: https://www.savvyanalysis.com/flight/1648114/63090bd1-31af-423c-af56-9fe795df9873 I agree except the oily plug is on #3 but the burnt-looking exhaust valve is on #2, so I'm not sure they are related events. Either way #2 is coming off, and I'm trying to decide on #3. Anthony - my cylinders were new Millennium at major overhaul in year 2000, now with >850 hrs on them. Only #1 got IRAN'd 250 hrs ago when I bought the plane because of a bad exhaust valve- it's been great since then. #1 and #4 feel so solid for compression and the valves look great on borescope, so I'm not going to touch them unless the mechanic finds something (I'm actually going to the folks you suggested). I'm gonna need some advice from them on #3. I'm betting the blow by is on #3 and possibly #2. I'm inclined to IRAN and not overhaul or get a new cyls if they are basically in decent shape - will probably rehone, get new rings, new exhaust valve and guide, grind the seat - this minimalist approach worked great for #1. Not surprisingly, #2 is my hottest cyl by about 20-30 degrees in cruise- hence the valve issue on it. It's not the leanest, so gotta be something with the baffle. I do work to keep it under 380, but who knows how the previous Texas owner ran it - and it had no real engine monitor when I got it.
    1 point
  46. Completed our Thanksgiving trip from Florida to Montana and back today. We flew 3140 NM in 25.6 hours of flight time. I burned 249 gal of fuel for a 9.7 gal/hr average. 54J-KPBF-KHUT-KAIA-1S3-KHLN (1585 NM) and KHLN-KAIA-KHUT-KPBF-54J (1555 NM) As always seems to be the case, we had headwinds going both directions so ended with a 122kt/GS average.
    1 point
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