hardtailjohn wrote:If you don't provide me with logs, you don't get an annual. Plain and simple. Plus I'd throw you out of the shop! (literally!!) I tried to stay quiet about this thread, but it's so out of line it's pathetic. If you don't turn your logs over, the IA CANNOT annual that aircraft. If you're that paranoid, you should get your A&P and IA and do your own!
Good grief!!! John
I am in the "keep your logbooks in hand" camp.
I know of one situation where an IA's employee had a grudge against one of the IA's customers,
when that customer's airplane was in for annual the logbooks just happened to get lost.
Everyone involved knew the employee had taken them, but no one could prove it.
He got fired, but the logbooks were still gone.
What's that do to the value of that airplane?
A mechanic on my airport used to have a pilot lounge above the office,
it was open to people to hang out in and the local pilot association used to have meetings there.
One day at a pilot assn meeting I noticed than there was someone's logbooks just
laying around on the coffee table mixed in with a bunch of magazines, just begging to get lost or taken.
Some people just leave their logbooks & aircraft records with their mechanic.
I know of a situation where the mechanic passed away, his family just locked up the shop.
Nobody around for quite a while.
When the customers were finally able to get in touch with the family,
and asked for their paperwork,
they were told "nobody's taking my dad's stuff".
I think everything got sorted out, eventually, but it was certainly a bad situation.
I know of another case when a customer's logbooks got lost at the mechanics shop.
The mechanic was as honest as the day is long, but he was very disorganized.
I suspect the logbooks got put into a manila folder with paperwork for another plane
and given to the owner of that other plane.
They never turned up,
At annual time, I take the logbooks etc (in a 3 ring binder) to the mechanic.
I am there or at least close by while he reviews them and/or fills them out as required.
Then they go home with me.
I don't think I've even left the paperwork for my airplane overnight in the past 20 years.