Pinecone wrote:...I've searched the baggage compartment STCs, and it doesn't appear that any of the flat floor baggage extension offerings are approved for the A185F. I'll speculate that the factory extended baggage front support is structural, and getting approval to remove it was too difficult...
Pinecone (and everyone else), what I'm about to say is from the archives of my gray matter internal hard drive as my 185, parts manuals, log books, etc are in Texas and I'm back in Alaska - so keep that in mind in what I'm about to say.
The A-E models of the 185 did not come with an extended baggage from Cessna. So the reason the A185F is not included in the STC of, for instance the Airglas Carbon Fiber flat-floor extended baggage, is (and this is speculation on my part but I think makes sense):
1. the F model 185's would require removing an existing extended baggage that didn't exist with the A-E models which probably would require a totally different STC.
2. since the F model now had a factory extended baggage the market would be much smaller then the market for the A-E models cause only a knucklehead like me (and you) would replace one extended baggage with another, even though it gives extra cargo space.
So having said that according to my A&P/IA none of the stuff that needs/can be removed to clean up the A185F’s factory extended baggage and allow the installation of the Airglas Carbon Fiber kit is structural. It’s only purpose was to support the factory extended baggage and the battery, cables, etc located under it.
Which begs the question what engineer thought it would be a good idea to use a piece of canvas as the back wall for the factory extended baggage AND THEN snap it from the back so if anything fell against it with any force the snaps could give way and the item go all the way to the tail moving the weight and balance and fouling up the rudder/elevator/trim cables in the process?
Anyway, if you decide to mount your 406 ELT out of the way under the new flat floor be sure and check the FAA’s relatively new mounting requirements. Requires an attachment that accounts for shear loads so just A COUPLE of rivets through the skin isn’t sufficient.
Gray matter time. I BELIEVE my A&P/IA determined that installing the Airglas Carbon Fiber kit was a minor modification because:
1. Burl’s battery box STC allowed us to move the battery to the firewall which meant we could remove everything battery related from in/around/and attached to the factory extended baggage.
2. The Airglas Carbon Fiber kit is STC’d for models A-E, the difference with the F model already discussed.
3. There was nothing structural about the factory extended baggage that was removed.
4. Removing the factory extended baggage components and replacing them with the Airglas kit did not take the plane out of it’s approved weight or balance limits.
Again this is from memory but I’m pretty sure it’s accurate. I think.
