Chris:
 
You are not clear enough about where the slight buckling is;
Two possibilities:
 
A) It is the wing root fairing that is wrinkled. If this is the case, it can be 
repalced. It is not a structural component and has no effect on flying the 
plane.
 
B) It is the side wall of the aircraft that is buckled and as part of the 
structure of the plane is usually buckeld because of a collapsed nosewheeel or 
similar hard landing. An A&P would have to decide if it is airworthy or not.
 
As an important part of checking a coupe's frame for indications of hard 
landings here are a few things to look for:
 
A) The bottom of the firewall can have some serious wrinkling which could 
indicate a nose in.
 
B) The two sort of triangular panels under the plane between the walkway and 
the belly of the plane will show wrinkles indicating one of the wings being 
pused backwards or a MLG that hit something. Inspect the rear spar on the 
inside of the spar cap attachment for buckling.
 
C) wrinkles on the wing root fairing which may indicate it has been damaged and 
sort of flattened out again to be re-used rather than replaced. Not 
structurally dangerous but a good reason to inspect further.
 
D) Wrinkles on the top end of the tailcone are usually due to the tail being 
pushed down. only the bolts holding the horizontal stabilizer are approved push 
down points. These wrinkles do not relate to hard landings.
 
E) Misalignment between the wings and the horizontal stabilizer. While the 
wings have a dihedral and the stabilizer is flat, seen from behind, the 
stabilizer height on both sides of the plane must match corresponding points on 
both wings. Wing angle has some minor adjustement at the wing attachment bolts 
but at most you can move wingtips up and down about two inches. A 
larger difference could indicate a twisted main spar. 
 
Alan Fairclough
N87333
N94694


      

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