DC_Brasil Posted September 12 Report Posted September 12 Hello, 1990 Mooney M20J. Just flew home from my annual and after I parked the plane and shutdown, a linesman at the ramp told me there was a screw on the ground, right under the exhaust. I cannot be sure it wasn't already there at the ramp but also, I want to know where it came from. The screw looks broken and was kind of coated in some lubricant. It wasn't hot like it had fallen from the engine but it was warm to the touch (it's a sunny day and the ramp had no shadows). I'm trying to get an A&P to come see the plane but wanted to check with the experts here if anyone would have a guess. I have an important work commitment so I couldn't stay at the airport and uncowl the engine to take a look around. Any thoughts? My guess is that, if this screw came from my plane, it could only have fallen from the nose gear area or somewhere over the RH cowl flap. Thanks
CCAS Posted September 12 Report Posted September 12 It looks a bit like a brake caliper bolt but not sure how it would have ended up near your nose wheel. It may not have been from your aircraft but you might want to take a look at your left and right main wheels to see if the calipers are missing any bolts (and are safety wired). Otherwise if you still think it was deposited from your aircraft I’d remove the top and bottom cowlings and see if any of your engine accessories are missing mounting hardware.
PT20J Posted September 12 Report Posted September 12 You could measure the diameter and grip to determine the AN or MS part number for the bolt and then a search of the IPC will show where that bolt is used. 3
IvanP Posted September 12 Report Posted September 12 My suggestion is to remove the cowling and look for missing fasteners and possibly oil leak (looks like the bolt is covered in oil). Given the size and position it was found in - possibly cowl flap mechanism. Just a guess, though. Then again, it may not be from your plane. Cannot tell from the pictures for certain, but the break looks fresh. 1
ArtVandelay Posted September 13 Report Posted September 13 Given the bolt has a smooth section I would think it is used for a moving part, so brakes, engine cowl flaps, control arms (throttle, mixture, prop), landing gear, etc.
skykrawler Posted September 13 Report Posted September 13 Should've asked what was parked there before. That's a fairly large diameter bolt. Not very many that size on a Mooney.
mhrivnak Posted September 13 Report Posted September 13 That generally looks like the size of several bolts that hold the nose gear assembly together. If your thumbs are about like mine, that could be something like an AN6-14 or AN6-15, both of which are used in the nose gear. Take a look at IPC section 32-20-00 for the diagram and a list of all the bolts in that area. I wouldn't put my head under there until either confirming that the critical bolts are all there or attaching a tail weight. You might consider sticking your phone between the gear doors and taking several pictures facing forward. But also, wow that bolt has been through some trauma! There must be a story of how it got so scarred. Let us know if you figure out where it came from.
N201MKTurbo Posted September 13 Report Posted September 13 It is a fine thread bolt, so it didn’t come from the engine. But it is very oily. Does your engine leak oil? Is your landing gear oily?
Fritz1 Posted September 13 Report Posted September 13 This is a rather large sheared off bolt, thorough inspection of engine and nose gear is in order before flying plane
skykrawler Posted September 13 Report Posted September 13 5 hours ago, MooneyMitch said: Possibly an exhaust flange bolt. Exhaust flanges are held on with nuts, not bolts. 1
N201MKTurbo Posted September 13 Report Posted September 13 I’m voting for it’s not from the Mooney. 3
MooneyMitch Posted September 14 Report Posted September 14 19 hours ago, skykrawler said: Exhaust flanges are held on with nuts, not bolts. Possibly I used the wrong word.............exhaust flange. On my former Lycoming O-360 and IO-360, the exhaust headers from the cylinders were attached to the muffler tubes with 3 hole flanges [header and muffler], 3 bolts [such as the one shown in the photo], 3 tension springs, spacer washers and nuts w/cotter pins. As I look at the bolt photo further, yes, I agree the bolt does look too large to be one of the bolts for the exhaust joints.
MB65E Posted September 14 Report Posted September 14 I don’t think it’s from your Airplane. If it was maybe look near the alternator attachments and brackets. There is a lot of movement up there. -Matt
DC_Brasil Posted September 14 Author Report Posted September 14 Hello , Thanks for the answers and help. I had an A&P look at the plane yesterday and we discovered that bolt was indeed from my plane. It was part of the alternator mounting bracket or a supporting bracket. Nothing serious but important to get right, nevertheless. Thanks, everyone! 11
EricJ Posted September 15 Report Posted September 15 3 hours ago, DC_Brasil said: Hello , Thanks for the answers and help. I had an A&P look at the plane yesterday and we discovered that bolt was indeed from my plane. It was part of the alternator mounting bracket or a supporting bracket. Nothing serious but important to get right, nevertheless. Thanks, everyone! Good catch!
rturbett Posted Wednesday at 01:59 PM Report Posted Wednesday at 01:59 PM Glad it let you know on the ground!
DC_Brasil Posted Friday at 10:52 PM Author Report Posted Friday at 10:52 PM Yeah! Especially because it happened last Friday and Monday I had a 750nm work trip planned. Thankfully it was nothing serious. By the way, just flew my longest flight so far... 6.1 hours block time (5.8 air time) on the Mooney. What an amazing plane! 1
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