Aryana wrote:It’s good practice to have someone double check or supervise your work whether you’re a licensed mechanic or not.
The whole point is the safety of having another set of eyeballs go over everything to catch what you may have missed.
ggehrke wrote:Thanks guys for all the advise. What whee said is what I was concerned about, finding an A&P to sign off the log. I had a customer who owned a small FBO that wouldn’t touch experimental, and truth be told I don’t blame him. It would be his a$$ on the line if he missed something that the builder didn’t do correctly. A bolt not having tiewire and falling off after he signed off the logs.
Having another set of eyes is always a great idea, I just did not want to be placed in a position where I could not find a person to sign the books, or the person wants to spend a week tearing the plane apart.
Real good advise on going an EAA chapter, those guys have already found a mechanic that is willing to play ball.
Thanks again for all the great advise
tcj wrote:14 CFR Part 43 does not apply to amateur built experimental aircraft. Anyone may perform repairs, modifications, and alterations on them. No supervision is required. Heres an EAA webinar explaining. Drag the time line at the bottom forward to 0:34:11 where this discussion begins.
http://www.eaavideo.org/detail/video/52 ... aintenence
As far as log book entries, only the annual condition inspection is required to be logged. here's a short 3 min video explaining that. Listen very carefully to what he says.
http://www.eaavideo.org/detail/video/41 ... aintenence
CamTom12 wrote:It’s not often I disagree with Hammer, but I think he missed the nail on this one.
TangoFox wrote:So interpreting the regs I guess it would be legal to work on say a Bearhawk but not on a Wag Aero Trainer without an a&p or repairmans cert????
That doesn't make much sense
JP256 wrote:
And it's not correct. Both the Bearhawk and the WagAero Trainer are certified as "Experimental Amateur Built", and as such ANYONE can perform the maintenance on either aircraft, with the proviso that the "Condition Inspection" (think "annual") would have to be signed off either by the builder who has the FAA Repairman's Certificate for that aircraft, or by an FAA A&P rated mechanic. (Of course, an IA can do it as well.)
Hammer wrote:CamTom12 wrote:It’s not often I disagree with Hammer, but I think he missed the nail on this one.
Hahaha...good pun! [snip] The stakes are pretty high when you're up in the air...get it...pun.
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