EZFlap wrote:Your problem is that you have a Chevy that is stranded at a Ferrari dealership. I think you need to make a few phone calls to Schellville airport and Sonoma airport, which are within 20 or 30 miles of Napa. Somebody at one of those two airports will be able to help you. Removing the wings, flat-bedding it over to Schellville, installing a cylinder, and reinstalling the wings should still cost you less than $4000.
I'd have to agree with others here and say that getting it onto the right airport is the first priority. Because the ESTIMATE from the Jet place can change once they find a pebble embedded in your upholstery, etc. There are several far more experienced mechanics on this forum, and they can all feel free to correct me, but having a Part 61 airplane annualled and repaired by a 135 or 121 maintenance facility does not strike me as a cost-effective option.
With all due respects to the professionals at most jet centers, BTW. They are very highly trained and talented people, and are focused on safety, and focused on doing a good job. It's just that their normal methods and practices are oriented for a different mission, under a different set of rules, than most small GA shops.
mtv wrote:Most radial engines aren't gear driven.
MTV
desmo wrote:....the a/c is not flyable right now as it blew the head off of the one cylinder- must have eaten a valve. All compressions at the last annual were in the 70's.
Tadpole wrote:Is it a private airport owned by the Jet Center? I can understand them not letting another mechanic come work on it if it is being stored or tied down with them, otherwise it's not their call. If it is kept with them, get it moved to the transient ramp or something and have any mechanic you want to go work on it.
desmo wrote:....I think I've read on this forum that there's a fellow in WA state with six 175's. I'm going to try and find him- he should know a thing or two. I'm not adverse to dragging the plane up there either.....
EZFlap wrote: Your problem is that you have a Chevy that is stranded at a Ferrari dealership.....
Emory Bored wrote:It's a shame that it come to this but I think you went through the right steps to process it to this point. Good luck on all that and be very methodical about how you put it on the trailer. You could end up causing more damage without a plan. Take tools with you and get a bunch of opinions and advice before you go.
Cary wrote:The problem of buying an ultra cheap airplane is that often it costs ultra big money to make it a good airplane--whether it's an engine or airframe or otherwise. I'm familiar with a 182 that is presently in pieces, which the owner bought for a really, really cheap price (around $25K as I recall) although it looked good cosmetically. Paint covers a lot of ills, and this one has so much that if he gets it together for less than an additional $40K, I'll be surprised--and if he'd done his home work, he could have bought a pretty good 182 without all of the hassle for no more money.
I wish you well. A 175 is fundamentally a pretty good airplane, but I don't think your whole experience will be inexpensive.
Cary
L-19 wrote:I hope you can find a good IA on the field who can get you an annual & install a jug for less than $4k! Keep looking, wing removal would defiantly be a good 2nd option.mtv wrote:Most radial engines aren't gear driven.
MTV
Sorry Mike,
P&W R-1535, R-1690, R-1830, R-2000, Bristol Centaurus, Hispano... to name a few. As for other warbirds there's the Allison V-1740 & V-3420, Rolls Merlin & Griffon. Ya can't spin a prop that large without reduction gears. Most multi-row & some single row radials ARE driven thru pinion or planetary type reductions. A friend of mine has a T-6 with a 9cyl - reduction box - 3blade prop, has a very cool, distinctive whistle when it goes bye.
OK. An observation about the R2800 as long as we're off topic. Bradford F Hagie,(pronounced Haggy) the WWII pilot who I'm buying my Luscombe from, told me that he flew an F6F for one and a half HOURS with one of the top cylinders in the back row missing it's head. He couldn't make it back to the Lexington so he had to land on the first carrier he found. But he made it. I asked him how much oil it had in it when he landed and he said "how the hell should I know, must have been just enough though". He also related that the skipper of the flat top he landed on was angry because he wasn't authorized to land there and threatened to court marshal him. The admiral had to straighten it out. (hard to tell who this might have been, there were 43 admirals in the WWII US fleet in both theaters. ) I know from my own research that later in the war it became the norm for damaged aircraft to land on the first carrier of opportunity. I suspect that that policy change may have come about at least in part because of Brad. In most cases, these aircraft were simply pushed overboard. F6Fs were worth $86,000. Pilots were worth about $200,000. Or so I've read.mtv wrote:L-19 wrote:I hope you can find a good IA on the field who can get you an annual & install a jug for less than $4k! Keep looking, wing removal would defiantly be a good 2nd option.mtv wrote:Most radial engines aren't gear driven.
MTV
Sorry Mike,
P&W R-1535, R-1690, R-1830, R-2000, Bristol Centaurus, Hispano... to name a few. As for other warbirds there's the Allison V-1740 & V-3420, Rolls Merlin & Griffon. Ya can't spin a prop that large without reduction gears. Most multi-row & some single row radials ARE driven thru pinion or planetary type reductions. A friend of mine has a T-6 with a 9cyl - reduction box - 3blade prop, has a very cool, distinctive whistle when it goes bye.
Um, I was referring to ones that are currently and in past in operation in numbers higher than one. <snip> P/W 2800 P-47, F-6F, F-7F, F-8, and a dozen others,
V-12s don't count in a discussion of radial engines, by the way....![]()
Etc.
MTV
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