bonal Posted February 17, 2016 Report Posted February 17, 2016 For those who wish to speculate on how long to get back into flying condition I have provided the B.S. version fire away gents Quote
DXB Posted February 17, 2016 Report Posted February 17, 2016 Considerably longer than it would have taken to put the gear down. 3 Quote
carusoam Posted February 17, 2016 Report Posted February 17, 2016 Where is the version? i am using an iPad. I don't see what you guys are discussing. or did I miss something obvious? Best regards, -a- 1 Quote
Mcstealth Posted February 17, 2016 Report Posted February 17, 2016 2 hours ago, carusoam said: Where is the version? i am using an iPad. I don't see what you guys are discussing. or did I miss something obvious? Best regards, -a- Ditto ^^ Quote
DXB Posted February 18, 2016 Report Posted February 18, 2016 Cliffy is looking for hard data on gear up repair time. Thus far I have been lucky enough not to have a data point to add to his thread: Quote
carusoam Posted February 18, 2016 Report Posted February 18, 2016 Got it, I must have read the threads in reverse order today... I've picked up a lot of Mooney experience, but I don't have that one yet. fly in thunderstorm, check. fly with ice on the wings, check. GU landing, not yet... ( a few Hail Marys and an our Father to go with that ) Best regards, -a- Quote
Mcstealth Posted February 18, 2016 Report Posted February 18, 2016 (edited) I bet Maxwell could get it done in a reasonable amount of time. Reasonable of course is a subjective term. The factory is up and running, parts could be ordered, Parts could already be in stock if you're lucky. Pen Yaw engine could be shipped quick enough if a tear down reveals the need to do so. If your lucky again, maybe the sheet metal specialist has a gap in his calender. Maybe again the work shop has space enough your repair. Three weeks, no. Three months, maybe. Edited February 19, 2016 by Mcstealth Quote
M20F-1968 Posted February 19, 2016 Report Posted February 19, 2016 The process can be predictable: 1. Find shop you can get the airplane to. 2. Get quote for work and quote for time. Three months from start to finish. 3. Order parts, 2 month lead time quoted. 4. Watch shop put airplane in back corner while they accept other smaller jobs to "increase cash flow." 5. Multiply wait time for parts X 2. 6. Multiply time to finish for shop X 3 7. Multiply cost X4. 8. Continue to argue with insurance Co. 9. Welcome to GA John Breda Quote
MitchS Posted February 19, 2016 Report Posted February 19, 2016 Looking at the logbooks from when the prior owner did a gear up in my Mooney it was about 3.5-4 months from the day it had the GU to the day it was signed off as ready to roll again. (Must have been really lucky on parts!) Quote
carl Posted February 20, 2016 Report Posted February 20, 2016 if you are interested it that blue and white f that collappsed its nose gear . i am interested in that plane too partnership for a flip ? Quote
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