Ed,
 You are sure right about the insurance. If there are any changes 
that are not done the proper way they will not pay out on the claim. 
They have that in the paperwork. Your aircraft must be airworthy and 
any changes must be approved. If they are not your insurance is void.
 Small minor changes are one thing, but things that affect 
performance or structure are another. The big thing is that everyones 
thinking of what is safe is different. I'm not just talking about 
owners. Most owners want to do the right thing, but some don't. I 
really feel bad for the owers, when an owner trusts an A+P to do the 
right thing And he doesn't. There are way too many very bad A+P's out 
there. And the airplanes they turn out are not airworthy. I have see 
so many airplanes of all types that were butchered. Mosty by bad 
A+P's and some by owners.  I have seen hundreds of bad modifcations 
and inspections.
 To give some examples, I did an annual for the first time on this 
plane. a piper commancee, I found that it had a completely broken 
rear spar in the center section. The fitting was broken off the spar. 
The plane had a large patch on the leading edge of the wing that was 
5 or 6 years old. The spar had never been inspected after the damage. 
And it stayed that way till I found it. Great inspections over the 
years, and a great A+P. 
 The next one was a T-craft that I did for the first time. The owner 
said the plane was in great shape and the annual would only take a 
day. One day annuals, yeah right. He must have had plenty of them. 
After a short walk around I filled a page and a half on a legal pad 
of things that needed to be fixed. The main one was the spar in the 
hoizontal stab. was broken in half and the tail would flap like bird 
wings. Needless to say I didn't get the annual done in a day, I think 
we spent 5 or 6 weeks on it. Some of that was waiting on parts.
 Don't get me wrong, with a good helper I can do an annual on a coupe 
in a day or so. But It has to be one that I know and have been 
working on for years. And know that everything is up to speed. That 
is of course I don't find anything major wrong. Mark





--- In [email protected], [EMAIL PROTECTED] wrote:
>
> Hi coupers,
> I'm not a Legal Eagle, but I do know this much.
> If you happen to bang up your bird and the insurance company finds 
something 
> you added to you plane that should have had a 337 even though it 
had nothing 
> to do with the accident, it would and could cause your insurance to 
not to pay 
> you off.
> Many have made minor changes here and there on our aircraft without 
337's.
> Some of them would make the picky Fed grow hair on the palms of 
their hands.
> It's obvious that most want to be safe and do the correct thing, 
within 
> reason to be legal.
> It's the very few who make a modification on their own that can 
cause trouble
> that they're unaware of and take it upon themselves to break the 
law 
> sometimes without knowing it too. In aviation the penalty can often 
death by our own 
> stupidity. That's what field approvals are all about guys.
> Let's realize that even a clip to hold the map to the yoke or an 
installation 
> like the Garmin Gizmo thing or a mike switch on the yoke would or 
could 
> require a 337 field approval.
> If the feds had their way adding a good coat of wax to your plane 
would 
> require a 337.
> We must use good judgment. But at the same time let's be realistic 
and 
> practical
> about it. Ercoupe owners have a tech advantage to help each other 
out so as 
> to avoid the supreme penalty.
>  Prof. Ed
> 
> 
> 
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