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#1
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![]() I operate a 1978 P337H. If this is legit, I want to know about it.
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#2
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It just applies to the first year (1973), according to the article.
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#3
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This is probably what the Aviation Consumer's article is talking about. It's not a "factory recall" as such. It is pretty serious, but the modifications/repairs were not done at the factory, it is not, in fact, a complete re-manufacture and modification, nor does it affect the entire 1973 production run.
https://ww2.txtav.com/TechnicalPubli...Number=ME73-12 Yellow journalism comes to mind. AC will not be my reference of choice for making any aircraft purchase decisions. |
#4
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Just read it, holy heck that is a lot of stuff Cessna got wrong on the first batch of pressurized airplanes! Something like 24 major repairs/changes. One even calls for removing all the interior window molding and re-gluing the new moulding to the plexi windows before installation. Cessna allowed 10 hours labor just for that! In total, the labor was probably 100 hours or more, PER AIRCRAFT, plus all the parts they provided.
Must have been a costly campaign for Cessna, but they realized they better own up and fix the problems before the P-Model gained a bad rep in the marketplace. Still surprised that with all Cessna's experience building airplanes, there were so many "screw ups" in the original P design. Something to do with Pawnee's first ever pressurized twin? |