01 May 2025, 05:57 [ UTC - 5; DST ]
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Post subject: Re: WTB: MU2 Posted: 05 Jan 2020, 01:07 |
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Joined: 03/22/18 Posts: 3724 Post Likes: +2104 Location: Nashville, TN
Aircraft: Lazarus - a B60 Duke
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I guess if your yearly usage is <100 hours, it would be about the same wash then, correct?
And it doesn't require a "service center" per se for the Mits, does it? Any I/A can sign off the 100-hour inspection on a turbine aircraft.
I understand a service center will obviously know the eccentricities of the aircraft better than someone who doesn't work on them regularly, but is there anything special to a service center that requires the expenditure to fly there specifically?
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Post subject: Re: WTB: MU2 Posted: 05 Jan 2020, 02:02 |
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Joined: 12/07/17 Posts: 6976 Post Likes: +5868 Company: Malco Power Design Location: KLVJ
Aircraft: 1976 Baron 58
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That’s a level of airplane management I’m not replay prepared for and really don’t want. The idea that the local guy on my field can’t solve any problem with the airplane, maybe with the help of a tech guru from the type club on the phone would be scary to me. Makes it way to easy to end up AOG at home, much less on the road. I know turbine planes are more reliable but they do break sometimes. Obviously flying for specialized maintenance (major engine or critical airframe work) would be fine but to have to do so every 100 hours seems a bit much.
It’s my understanding that for part 91 ops only the inspection part of the maintenance programs are required. None of the actual maintenance tasks are. Can you not just have a local guy do the inspections and take it to the guru for every fifth one or something like that?
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Post subject: Re: WTB: MU2 Posted: 05 Jan 2020, 08:28 |
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Joined: 08/24/13 Posts: 9607 Post Likes: +4461 Company: Aviation Tools / CCX Location: KSMQ New Jersey
Aircraft: TBM700C2
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Username Protected wrote: Mu2 doesn’t require a Service Center, just an A&P (not even the I.A. required for a C150).
Maybe I misunderstood what you were saying here, but a non-IA A&P cannot sign off progressive inspections. It has to be an IA. Or did you mean inspections between annuals?
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Post subject: Re: WTB: MU2 Posted: 05 Jan 2020, 08:33 |
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Joined: 03/22/18 Posts: 3724 Post Likes: +2104 Location: Nashville, TN
Aircraft: Lazarus - a B60 Duke
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Well, I'm in Nashville, actually on the field with Reese and company, so I know they're local, they're just a bit pricey.
The difference between a $5,000 annual and a $32,000 like I just paid for on Laz.
Not that those places aren't worth their weight in gold for the depth of experience on the Mits, but I would also fall in the camp of "I'll let my local I/A do the annuals and take it to the tribal knowledge folks if something weird pops up my mechanic isn't familiar with", kind of like I have a local I/A installing a G4 in Laz because it's pretty straightforward but hunting a Duke expert to put this firewall shutoff cable in.
Saves a good bit of money with that approach. Don't go cheap on the important stuff, but don't drop an open checkbook annual with a retail shop, either.
Just my approach.
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Post subject: Re: WTB: MU2 Posted: 05 Jan 2020, 10:32 |
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Joined: 12/19/09 Posts: 340 Post Likes: +285 Company: Premier Bone and Joint Location: Wyoming
Aircraft: BE90,HUSK,MU-2
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I think maintenance plans become a combination of your belief structure, the plane you fly, and your location. Where I live, there really isn’t a “local guy.” Both the King Airs and the Mits fly elsewhere for service. The King Airs are a whole lot more common than the Mits so the flight is shorter because service centers are more numerous. I wouldn’t say that service at a specialized facility is necessarily more expensive, often the opposite is true. They know exactly what tends to break (more effective preventative maintenance), they can troubleshoot problems more rapidly and with greater efficiency (they’ve seen it all before) and often times if a part needs replacing they have it in stock or they can try it and see if it fixes the problem and go a different direction if it doesn’t. If the starter/generator brushes don’t meet spec, for example, they just overhaul them in house and move on. Things like that make it cheaper, not more expensive. If you have an experienced mechanic for your type of plane on your field, that’s great, and it makes sense to use them. But if you don’t and need to travel anyway, for me, it makes more sense to go someplace specialized. Your mileage may vary. I don’t know if it’s the plane, the systems, or the service level, but in 3.5 years and 750 hours so far in the Mits, flying on a schedule 2-3x/week, I’ve never had to ask a mechanic to come to my hangar to look at the plane. Can’t say that about my prior piston twin experience (even with specialized service center care), not by a long shot.
_________________ Thomas
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Post subject: Re: WTB: MU2 Posted: 05 Jan 2020, 10:51 |
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Joined: 03/23/08 Posts: 7357 Post Likes: +4085 Company: AssuredPartners Aerospace Phx. Location: KDVT, 46U
Aircraft: IAR823, LrJet, 240Z
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Username Protected wrote: Mu2 doesn’t require a Service Center, just an A&P (not even the I.A. required for a C150).
Maybe I misunderstood what you were saying here, but a non-IA A&P cannot sign off progressive inspections. It has to be an IA. Or did you mean inspections between annuals?
There is no “Annual Inspection” on Mitz. (Same with most Big birds). Just the MxMan program which only needs A&P. It is odd that a c150 requires a higher level of mechanic certificate than a jet but that’s how it is.
We did one or two in-house 100hr inspections since we have the monster jacks (very handy). It’s mostly look-n-lube. There is a gawdawful lot of stuff to lube. A well known type specific guru brings a level of pedigree to the logbooks, in my mind it buys me a year of phone support, and gives me the chance to let them fine tune things (engine and flap rigging, gear pressure, etc).
Spooling up a local guy is fantastic if you have one.
_________________ Tom Johnson-Az/Wy AssuredPartners Aerospace Insurance Tj.Johnson@AssuredPartners.com C: 602-628-2701
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Post subject: Re: WTB: MU2 Posted: 05 Jan 2020, 11:04 |
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Joined: 03/22/18 Posts: 3724 Post Likes: +2104 Location: Nashville, TN
Aircraft: Lazarus - a B60 Duke
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So if you don't fly 100 hours in a year, say it's 50-60, you don't need an annual inspection? Or you do the 100 hour as the annual and don't need an I/A? Assuming not on a maintenance program Part 91 individual owner. 
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Post subject: Re: WTB: MU2 Posted: 05 Jan 2020, 11:15 |
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Joined: 05/05/09 Posts: 5162 Post Likes: +5121
Aircraft: C501, R66
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Username Protected wrote: So if you don't fly 100 hours in a year, say it's 50-60, you don't need an annual inspection? Or you do the 100 hour as the annual and don't need an I/A? Assuming not on a maintenance program Part 91 individual owner.  It's 1 year or 100 hours. Mine is going in next month. I'm going to have to make up fake squawks to fix to give him something to do.
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Post subject: Re: WTB: MU2 Posted: 05 Jan 2020, 11:19 |
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Joined: 08/24/13 Posts: 9607 Post Likes: +4461 Company: Aviation Tools / CCX Location: KSMQ New Jersey
Aircraft: TBM700C2
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Username Protected wrote: There is no “Annual Inspection” on Mitz. (Same with most Big birds). Just the MxMan program which only needs A&P. It is odd that a c150 requires a higher level of mechanic certificate than a jet but that’s how it is.
We did one or two in-house 100hr inspections since we have the monster jacks (very handy). It’s mostly look-n-lube. There is a gawdawful lot of stuff to lube. A well known type specific guru brings a level of pedigree to the logbooks, in my mind it buys me a year of phone support, and gives me the chance to let them fine tune things (engine and flap rigging, gear pressure, etc).
Spooling up a local guy is fantastic if you have one. That is actually not correct. Progressive inspections per an approved program (whether from the mfr or another FAA approved plan) must be signed off by an IA or a Repair Station. FAR Part 65 does not give an A&P without an IA the authority to sign off a progressive inspection. The only required inspection an A&P can sign off on is the 100 hour inspection done for non-part 135 aircraft for hire (that flight school 150). Part 65 explicitly gives an IA the authority to do a progressive inspection, the A or P does not have this. Do you have anything back that understanding up? Like a letter from the FAA?
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Post subject: Re: WTB: MU2 Posted: 05 Jan 2020, 11:21 |
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Joined: 08/21/14 Posts: 287 Post Likes: +88 Location: KPDK
Aircraft: C421B MU2-40 Solitai
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In my Solitaire I quite often fly from KPDK to KFXE which takes just under 2 hours. The Atlanta class B keeps me at 4-5000ft for 15 minutes and I generally burn 100-105gph, in cruise I typically see 70-80 gph @98% and 290-300ktas. I don't push the limits (314ktas), but I don't pull back to to 96-97% either. I just put my plane in for its 100/200/600 inspection, and had no squawks. In fact, over the last 5 years, I can count the squawks on one hand and I never cancelled a trip.  I certainly can't say that about all of the twin Ceesnas that I've owned.
_________________ Sandy
Last edited on 05 Jan 2020, 11:29, edited 1 time in total.
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Post subject: Re: WTB: MU2 Posted: 05 Jan 2020, 11:23 |
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Joined: 11/08/12 Posts: 7260 Post Likes: +4763 Location: Live in San Carlos, CA - based Hayward, CA KHWD
Aircraft: Piaggio Avanti
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Username Protected wrote: So if you don't fly 100 hours in a year, say it's 50-60, you don't need an annual inspection? The inspections are 100hr/12 month. So you have to do them annually anyway. Quote: Assuming not on a maintenance program Part 91 individual owner. All twin turbine aircraft are on a maintenance program, not on annual inspections. See 14 CFR part 91.409(f). The Mits maintenance program is based on 100/200/600 hour intervals, and the 100/200 are specified as “or 12 months”.
_________________ -Jon C.
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Post subject: Re: WTB: MU2 Posted: 05 Jan 2020, 11:33 |
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Joined: 03/22/18 Posts: 3724 Post Likes: +2104 Location: Nashville, TN
Aircraft: Lazarus - a B60 Duke
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That's what I thought, still have to do the Annual and it still has to have an I/A. I knew the turbines had to go by the manufacturer's interval inspections, but when I said "Maintenance Plan" I'm thinking more of Power by the Hour (if that even exists still) or similar ESP. I haven't been in the 91/135 Turbine world for over a decade, not sure what has changed. Thanks all for the clarification. 
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Post subject: Re: WTB: MU2 Posted: 05 Jan 2020, 15:45 |
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Joined: 08/24/13 Posts: 9607 Post Likes: +4461 Company: Aviation Tools / CCX Location: KSMQ New Jersey
Aircraft: TBM700C2
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Username Protected wrote: Actually our provider Chuck Walton in TN is not even an A&P, just an A. He’s been around for a minute...
When I had my come-to-Jesus at the FSDO they poured over our Mx records and only commented that I had failed to write the letter selecting out Mx Program per Jon’s note of 91.409f. Letter added, problem solved.
T It seems you are in the majority opinion....phase inspections for mfr programs only require an A&P. I find it really odd, as a maint program for a single engine turbine must be overseen or signed off by an IA (or repair station or mfr) per 91.409(d)(1), but add another engine and only an A&P is needed. Maybe the reasoning is that 91.409(d) programs are not mfr developed so they want more scrutiny of when the program should change.
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