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  #1  
Unread 05-13-20, 07:11 PM
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Note 1 from 78-09-05

Note 1 from the wing spar AD specifies 3000/300 for the inspections, if the airplane (or at least the components in question) were used for "contour or
terrain following operations at low altitudes". Walking through the older logs for my D model (still not yet ferried home), I found an unfortunate oversight on my part: a field approval for a camera port, and an eddy current inspection at 3000 hours. The AD note doesn't specifically mention aerial photography, but it also doesn't make an explicit list either, using words such as, well, "such as", and "etc". Now it also uses "strongly urges" for such cases, but my IA firmly believes that if I were found in the woods with my wings folded like a lawn chair, the FAA would call bad judgment on him and do their worst.

Would you qualify aerial photography as "contour or terrain following operations at low altitude"?

Did the previous owner open Pandora's box for me, regardless, by doing the inspection at 3k hours?

Has anyone done this recently that wouldn't mind sharing the cost of it?

Thanks.
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Unread 05-14-20, 03:28 AM
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Skymaster337B Skymaster337B is offline
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I wouldn’t consider aerial photography low level or contour flying, unless that’s what they were doing while taking the pictures. This AD was caused by fire spotters that flew low level and terrain contour. Prolonged High stresses on the wing from yanking and banking like a combat pilot is what we are talking about. That kind of flying isn’t good for picture taking. Steady and stable platform is what photographers need.

The Eddy current inspection by itself doesn’t comply with the AD; it also requires a dye penetrate inspection of the spare web. So unless all that was done, and the AD signed off as “complied,” then the eddy current test was just someone’s warm and fuzzy. I’d do one as part of a pre-buy, but that doesn’t fulfill the AD. However, if the AD was fully complied the IA would have to sign it off and specifically state its next due date/time. If there’s such a logbook entry then yes, it needs to be done.

That’s what I think.
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Unread 05-15-20, 05:32 PM
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Thanks for that.

And good point. I'll have to go back to see if there was anything about the penetrant test. I was aware of that, but don't recall seeing any entries about it. Also don't see any reference to compliance.

I'm also inclined to agree about operations specific to photography. I can't imagine that anyone would last very long staring through a lens while the pilot was working the elevators hard. And while photography might involve the elevated Gs associated with circling, it isn't cyclical, nor extreme. I'm not an engineer by trade, but I recall well from my engineering classes that Aluminum is not pleased by cyclical stress, whereas static load is not so much an issue.

Still curious as to the costs. I'm only 700 hours away from the maintenance program prescribed for all serials thru 1852.
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