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Posted

I was very excited yesterday because I found an almost new Hartzell scimitar prop for sale. I negotiated a good price with the seller, and was about to start worrying about payment and shipping. But, I called Hartzell to see what it would take to get the STC paperwork. At first it seemed like a pure formality -- pay $500, get the papers that you put in your binder, done. But then they asked for the serial number, and stopped dead in the tracks. Their statement was the following:

-- yes this is the same exact propeller as we would have sold to you for your Mooney;

-- but, because it was sold for an experimental airplane (it was used on a Glasair), we never issued an STC for it, so now we cannot issue an exchange STC to go from the Glasair to your Mooney. 

So basically this prop, despite being exactly the same prop that can be installed on my plane, will never be able to be installed on a certified plane. Ugh! All this trouble for nothing.

  • Like 1
Posted

I am guessing it's because of liability.  Not only due to experimental anyone could have does something to the prop. Additionally,  not issuing stc initially they loose chain of custody.  

Posted

Yes, experimental means it may not be installed by a licensed mechanic and thus no assurance that the propeller has been treated properly in installation, operation or removal. Sucks but I am sure they have been burned before.

Posted

There is no way of knowing what sorts of non-certified things happen to it on an experimental airplane, so there's good reason to handle it that way.  I don't know wether that status changes if you send it to a proper shop for overhaul, but that probably makes it uneconomical.

  • Like 2
Posted
46 minutes ago, EricJ said:

There is no way of knowing what sorts of non-certified things happen to it on an experimental airplane, 

While that may be true, it is also true for props installed on certificated aircraft. Just becasue something is installed on certifcated aircraft does not mean that bad things did not happen to it. Of course, I understand the CYA approach taken by the manufacturer and the reasons for it. Sucks for the OP, though. 

  • Like 3
Posted

I would think if the part numbers are the same.  
some items are identical but the part numbers reflect experimental or certified.  
If it’s experimental it’s a lot cheaper. 
make of that what you will. 

 

 

Posted

Wonder why you can’t do an overhaul directly with the manufacturer? I had to do a OH on a wooden prop that developed a groove after rubbing a cotter pin. They sent that back along with the paperwork/logs as if it were new. Maybe too much headache to worry with that though. 

Posted

Certified or not, when it gets installed on an experimental it becomes an experimental part. Same for engines. 
 

if a certified engine gets put on an experimental aircraft, that engine immediately becomes an experimental engine. And can no longer be installed on a certified aircraft without a factory overhaul. 

Posted
11 minutes ago, icurnmedic said:

Wonder why you can’t do an overhaul directly with the manufacturer? I had to do a OH on a wooden prop that developed a groove after rubbing a cotter pin. They sent that back along with the paperwork/logs as if it were new. Maybe too much headache to worry with that though. 

You can. It’s not the headache, it’s the cost. As he pointed out it is “a good deal on a nearly new Hartzell Scimitar prop”. A 3 blade might cost $5 k to overhaul and another $1.3 k for the prop governor overhaul. It is no longer a good deal. 

Posted
35 minutes ago, Aaviationist said:

Certified or not, when it gets installed on an experimental it becomes an experimental part. Same for engines. 
 

if a certified engine gets put on an experimental aircraft, that engine immediately becomes an experimental engine. And can no longer be installed on a certified aircraft without a factory overhaul. 

Bingo. Just like the “cheap” Lycomings sold through Vans. 

Posted (edited)

It's mainly "paper" assurance, obviously, there are some corner cases where paper means nothing. In reality, 

New & certified >> old & experimental, everyone will agree on this 

New & certified == new & experimental, it's pure liability and paper trail

So one can conclure,

New & experimental >> old & certified 

Where it becomes tricky is,

Old & certified vs old & experimental? 

An STC tend to rely on certified approved data for parts as well as approved modification of design. A factory overhaul by the part manufacturer, should get you the former.

The paper trail has some value: an aircraft gets priced with large discount the moment one loses it's papers (logbook, history, stc paper...), simply because of the loss of documentation, even if nothing changes in the aircraft.

Edited by Ibra
Posted
14 hours ago, Pinecone said:

Field Approval?

I asked Cody Stallings, and he said a field approval would be a complicated problem, requiring probably several months of back and forth with a DER from the FAA, then having to put the airplane for a while in the Experimental category while I do test runs, etc. A big mess which I do not want to get into. (Part of the STC paperwork is data on how to adjust the weight and balance, new markings for the tach, etc., all of which I would not have without the official STC from Hartzell. Of course, this information is the same for all installations of this prop, but formally since the STC is specific to each plane, I cannot take that information from my neighbor and use it on my plane. Why? No idea, it's the same prop.) Oh well.

Posted
2 minutes ago, AndreiC said:

 Why? No idea, it's the same prop.) Oh well.

Same reason that you can’t unbolt a used “cheaper experimental” Lycoming IO-390 that came with a Van’s kit and put it on using an established Mooney STC. …and calling it “Certified “. 

Posted

But the point I think is that when this prop was sold it was not cheaper, for experimental use only. I think when Hartzell sells this prop they say "Give me the money. Here is the prop. BTW, what airplane are you hanging this on so we can give you the correct STC for it? Oh, it's experimental, so you don't need an STC? Good luck then."

My understanding is that the issue is that it was used on an experimental plane, so it might have been touched by the unholy hands of a non-A&P. Thus it has been forever desecrated.

  • Like 1
Posted

It all comes out to one word---LIABILITY and who assumes it when installed on a certified airplane

Go "Experimental" and the owner/builder now assumes the liability in TOTAL for everything.

All "chain of traceability" for a certified part is lost once "experimental" is used on it.

  • Like 1
Posted

I understand the issue of traceability, but maybe someone with an IA can then answer the following question. Say this prop was not a scimitar model, which is not covered by the original TC, but one of the Hartzell props that were approved in the TC, so I would not need an STC. Could I then install it on my plane? Or is it the case that every part of the plane, down to the smallest bolt, must always have had its life spent on certified planes?

I thought that the only requirement was that all parts of the plane must conform to the TC or to STCs. Can’t my AP (or Hartzell themselves, for that matter) look at my prop and say “yes, this prop is still in working condition as it was designed, so you can install it via the STC or the original TC”?

Posted
4 minutes ago, AndreiC said:

I understand the issue of traceability, but maybe someone with an IA can then answer the following question. Say this prop was not a scimitar model, which is not covered by the original TC, but one of the Hartzell props that were approved in the TC, so I would not need an STC. Could I then install it on my plane? Or is it the case that every part of the plane, down to the smallest bolt, must always have had its life spent on certified planes?

I thought that the only requirement was that all parts of the plane must conform to the TC or to STCs. Can’t my AP (or Hartzell themselves, for that matter) look at my prop and say “yes, this prop is still in working condition as it was designed, so you can install it via the STC or the original TC”?

Assuming it is on the TC, the. As others suggested, it’s liability. If your IA wants to take that on, then they can declare that prop as airworthy for the application. It happens with avionics and other stuff, but the risk might be less. It’s all risk tolerance. It’s like the question of major/minor.  How much responsibility does an IA or mechanic want to take on. 

Posted (edited)

This is why airplane related prices have gone to the moon.

 

 It’s all mostly nonsense IMO

 

 I have not seen a quality difference specific to certified vs exp, old vs new


 It’s really just a matter of the quality of the wrench and the stick 

 

 Plane that I dealt with recently, certified, I go through the logs and the last annual the IA had “checked alternator belt” on the printed annual sticker…problem chief, there ain’t no alternator belt for that type of engine.  

 

Thus logic states the annual was pencil whipped, and all the other work this joker did is now suspect, thus the planes airworthiness is suspect

 

 

 

 In the case of this prop, I don’t exactly think the experimental replaced the oil with super glue or disassembled and reassembled the prop for fun, if it looks and functions as it should this really should be a non event.

Edited by Jackk
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