Mcstealth Posted June 4, 2023 Report Posted June 4, 2023 (edited) I have scheduled an inspection with Dugosh. I asked for and recieved what their pre-buy entails. They handed me the Mooney 100hr inspection guide. $1800. I read the two sheet inspection. Seems pretty thorough to me. I am paying extra to borescope the cam. Should I ask for anything more to be done? Edited June 4, 2023 by Mcstealth Quote
N201MKTurbo Posted June 4, 2023 Report Posted June 4, 2023 1 hour ago, M20Doc said: The current Mooney inspection checklist is 7 pages long. https://www.mooney.com/wp-content/uploads/2020/12/100-HOURANNUAL-Inspection-Guide.pdf That’s the checklist I used to develop my progressive maintenance plan. It must be a good one, the FAA approved it. Quote
bcg Posted June 6, 2023 Report Posted June 6, 2023 Dugosh is good people and they're thorough, if there are issues with the plane, they'll likely find them.Sent from my Pixel 6a using Tapatalk 1 Quote
Mcstealth Posted June 6, 2023 Author Report Posted June 6, 2023 On 6/4/2023 at 4:53 AM, M20Doc said: The current Mooney inspection checklist is 7 pages long. https://www.mooney.com/wp-content/uploads/2020/12/100-HOURANNUAL-Inspection-Guide.pdf The papers I have, are dated. Good catch Dr. Clarence. There are some differences but not a terrible lot. There is one added section though and the whole checklist was revamped. Thanks........ Quote
gabez Posted June 15, 2023 Report Posted June 15, 2023 here is one I learned the hard way, pressurize the fuel tanks for fuel cap leaks...or any other leaks Quote
Mcstealth Posted June 15, 2023 Author Report Posted June 15, 2023 3 hours ago, gabez said: here is one I learned the hard way, pressurize the fuel tanks for fuel cap leaks...or any other leaks Got ya. Actually @LANCECASPER has already schooled me on that one. Quote
dlthig Posted June 15, 2023 Report Posted June 15, 2023 Infinity quoted me 16 hours for a pre-buy. They borescope. 1 Quote
Yetti Posted June 15, 2023 Report Posted June 15, 2023 (edited) Get an AD list and purchase the CD from the FAA. Depending on the year of the plane, the initial AD list would take 4-8 hours. Depending on the level of documentation some ADs are just guesses. Oil gears being one of the guesses Edited June 15, 2023 by Yetti 1 Quote
PT20J Posted June 16, 2023 Report Posted June 16, 2023 7 hours ago, gabez said: here is one I learned the hard way, pressurize the fuel tanks for fuel cap leaks...or any other leaks Not too much pressure or you can damage things. I put a length of vinyl hose over the vent and blow with my lungs while spraying soapy water on the cap. 1 2 Quote
MikeOH Posted June 16, 2023 Report Posted June 16, 2023 3 hours ago, Yetti said: Get an AD list and purchase the CD from the FAA. Depending on the year of the plane, the initial AD list would take 4-8 hours. Depending on the level of documentation some ADs are just guesses. Oil gears being one of the guesses Yuuup! I backed out of PPI because the seller couldn’t prove the oil gears AD. 1 Quote
Yetti Posted June 16, 2023 Report Posted June 16, 2023 51 minutes ago, MikeOH said: Yuuup! I backed out of PPI because the seller couldn’t prove the oil gears AD. I doubt anyone could. There were three AD on the gear in rapid succession. So the write is usually "replaced oil gears" Unless it says which one and what materials then you just have to guess. Quote
Mcstealth Posted June 16, 2023 Author Report Posted June 16, 2023 (edited) 6 hours ago, M20Doc said: Remove the right magneto, light and mirror to examine the the pump body. Excuse my ignorance. Oil pump? Edited June 16, 2023 by Mcstealth Quote
Mcstealth Posted June 16, 2023 Author Report Posted June 16, 2023 18 hours ago, Yetti said: Get an AD list and purchase the CD from the FAA. Depending on the year of the plane, the initial AD list would take 4-8 hours. Depending on the level of documentation some ADs are just guesses. Oil gears being one of the guesses I would think Dugosh would have this CD? Don't assume? Quote
MooneyMitch Posted June 16, 2023 Report Posted June 16, 2023 3 minutes ago, Mcstealth said: Excuses my ignorance. Oil pump? There are no question that need an excuse. Ask away, you're learning and that's a good thing!! 1 Quote
Fly Boomer Posted June 16, 2023 Report Posted June 16, 2023 12 minutes ago, Mcstealth said: I would think Dugosh would have this CD? Don't assume? I assumed “the CD” meant the one with all documents (337s, etc.) ever filed with the FAA on a specific airplane? Quote
Yetti Posted June 16, 2023 Report Posted June 16, 2023 y'alls google fu is weak. https://www.faa.gov/licenses_certificates/aircraft_certification/aircraft_registry/copies_aircraft_records 1 Quote
MikeOH Posted June 16, 2023 Report Posted June 16, 2023 17 hours ago, Yetti said: I doubt anyone could. There were three AD on the gear in rapid succession. So the write is usually "replaced oil gears" Unless it says which one and what materials then you just have to guess. Correct. IIRC (it's been many years ago), between the multiple ADs, and WHEN the engine was apart relative to the AD's date requirements, we couldn't confirm which gears. And, I wasn't going to purchase based on a 'guess' and the seller wasn't going to pay for the inspection. Life went on... Quote
MikeOH Posted June 16, 2023 Report Posted June 16, 2023 8 hours ago, M20Doc said: Remove the right magneto, light and mirror to examine the the pump body. @M20Doc You are the expert! My admittedly long ago failing memory of the the "oil pump gears" ADs was one of gear material: namely, if the gears were of sintered metal construction they needed to be replaced. If true, how does examining the pump body render a decision on what the gear material is? I might have bought that plane if the inspection only involved removing the mag! I was told the whole accessory case had to be removed in order to examine the gears. (Truth be told, I'm MUCH happier with the plane I bought vs. that one. So, it all worked out) Thanks! Quote
EricJ Posted June 16, 2023 Report Posted June 16, 2023 7 hours ago, Fly Boomer said: I assumed “the CD” meant the one with all documents (337s, etc.) ever filed with the FAA on a specific airplane? You can download them directly now. No need to order the CD. Set up a free account and download whatever you want. https://cares.faa.gov/home 1 Quote
MikeOH Posted June 16, 2023 Report Posted June 16, 2023 1 hour ago, M20Doc said: Oil pump body design is a good indicator of gear replacement AD compliance. The old pump bodies were two piece, some had a large cotter pin holding the idler shaft in place. Current gears go in a one piece pump body with spinning shafts as part of the gear and hence no cotter pin required. @M20Doc As an indicator or as proof of compliance? Again, my recollection is the original pumps (old style bodies) had ‘good’ gears but if the engine had been apart the gears could have been replaced with ‘bad’ sintered gears back into the old bodies. Hence, the issue is if the logs don’t reflect what exact gears were used. The time period came into play because after the sintered gears were purged from the supply chain any later replacements could only have been with ‘good’ gears; it matters when the engine was apart! The above is NOT to be taken as the absolute truth; just what I remember from my experience. Quote
Mcstealth Posted June 16, 2023 Author Report Posted June 16, 2023 23 hours ago, PT20J said: Not too much pressure or you can damage things. I put a length of vinyl hose over the vent and blow with my lungs while spraying soapy water on the cap. I assume with full tanks? Quote
zehutiman Posted June 20, 2023 Report Posted June 20, 2023 I utilized Savvy services for several Prebuys. They perform a lot of the legwork and, coordinate with the mx facility. If it’s your first time getting involved in purchasing an airplane, they’re a helpful resource. It’s nice to get a second opinion on some squawks that arise from the Prebuy. Quote
Mcstealth Posted June 20, 2023 Author Report Posted June 20, 2023 1 hour ago, zehutiman said: I utilized Savvy services for several Prebuys. They perform a lot of the legwork and, coordinate with the mx facility. If it’s your first time getting involved in purchasing an airplane, they’re a helpful resource. It’s nice to get a second opinion on some squawks that arise from the Prebuy. First I've heard of that. Thank you. Quote
wombat Posted June 20, 2023 Report Posted June 20, 2023 I recently bought a plane and used Savvy's prebuy as well. The biggest thing they did was to find several shops near the aircraft and contact them about doing the prebuy. I'm not unsatisfied, but not entirely confident I really got a good deal. But it's like insurance... Unless things go horribly wrong, it's a waste of money. Quote
Recommended Posts
Join the conversation
You can post now and register later. If you have an account, sign in now to post with your account.