gbflyer wrote:Say you’re looking at aircraft logs and the I/A notes something during annual inspection, such as a pin hole leak in an oil cooler, doesn’t fix it, and signs it off as airworthy. Is that just crummy maintenance practice or a departure from the rules?
Marmaduke wrote:The discrepancy is actually entered into the logbook?Just making sure of the situation.
Thank you dogpilot. Here’s the entry. Names scratched out to protect the guilty.dogpilot wrote:I think what he was doing is buying the annual on the aircraft with the exception of the oil cooler. A leak can be airworthy, otherwise radial aircraft would never fly. There are specs for how many drips per minute and so on as to being acceptable. It does put the owner on notice to get the item on the to be repaired list that year. Not actually seeing the entry, he could completed the "inspection" and noting that that item be repaired before further flight. So a mechanic could go and change/overhaul the cooler and the aircraft would not have to go through the annual again. In other words, "I am done here, fix this before you fly."

Ha! I’ll never tell!8GCBC wrote:gbflyer wrote:Say you’re looking at aircraft logs and the I/A notes something during annual inspection, such as a pin hole leak in an oil cooler, doesn’t fix it, and signs it off as airworthy. Is that just crummy maintenance practice or a departure from the rules?
What the hell are you buying NOW? Aloha Justin

I don’t disagree. Mostly. The owner of this aircraft is a notorious cheapskate in some respects, very, very generous in others. There are so many undocumented discrepancies on this thing that it’s unbelievable, then noting stuff like the oil cooler and fuel cap gaskets???? I know the I/A has been cutting him a ton of slack on stuff. For the life of me I cannot figure out cutting so many corners with an aircraft that spends probably 50% of the flying time over cold water often times with family or employees aboard. It’s getting real maintenance this time around. Gonna be a lot of pain.DENNY wrote:SOOOOOOO lets talk real world stuff. Does a oil seep/small leak make the plane not airworthy?? If so then I would say 50 percent of GA airplanes should be grounded today. If ya got some paperwork that says any oil leak on the engine is means for grounding (Frankland) then OK, but as a owner I want to know if the plane will fly!!! If it will I want to know about anything need to be address before the next annual/so many hours. That IA made it clear. Your got some stuff to work on, might not want to wait on it. All this she/he wrote stuff is BS. The owner is who is responsible!!
DENNY
AKJurnee wrote:Pretty sloppily worded entry, but I’ve seen worse.
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