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Old 18th May 2006, 15:31
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Maintenance

Could you let me know your experience of maintenance organisations?
Is it possible to get quotes for annuals and CofA's? Or should I get used to knowing how much it will cost when I get the bill?
If you own an aircraft how do you manage your relationhip with your maintenance organisation, and how far away are they from your home airfield?
As a new member of a group the maintenance regime is the most confusing thing to deal with. How did you cope when you first became an owner?
Cheers
R5
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Old 18th May 2006, 16:41
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You may get a quote for the inspection, based on 30-40 hrs work say, but they can't quote on any remedial work until they've done the inspection. Some tasks, like replacing cables, batteries etc may have 'standard' times, but generally it'll be charged at actual hours after work has been bone.
When you do get a quote, it won't usually include extras like radio annual, flight test, CAA charges, VAT, Oil/filters/sundries etc.

Rule 22 - It will always take longer and cost more - even when you take rule 22 into account.
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Old 18th May 2006, 17:07
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One of the hardest things to learn upon becoming an aircraft owner is that so few businesses (and individuals) working in GA can be trusted.

The % is below any other business I've been remotely involved in, and this probably includes double glazing, central heating, you name it.

It starts with the dealer who sold you the plane (a lot of dealers are quite sharp) and you move on from there.

I think a part of the problem is that a lot of people are not making much money and, when they are busy and sending out invoices, they aren't getting paid. Another part is that aviation has a somewhat romantic air to it and thus attracts a lot of "character" types; the sort that dominate the airport bar with amazing stories but when it comes to something concrete they usually cannot be trusted as far as one can throw them (which isn't very far if they spend a lot of time in the airport bar).

A lot of people are awfully nice but simply clueless. My universal experience with a number of avionics outfits, even some high recommended and well known ones, is that they know very slightly more about aircraft electronics than your garage knows about car electronics (you follow the wiring diagram provided and if it doesn't work you give up).

Anyway, to answer your question the way to do this is to casually and in a totally non-committal way walk in to the office and ask for standard pricings for various types of service, for a particular aircraft type. Get it written down and keep it.

The cost of a 50hr check for a new C172 will be similar to a 30 year old C172, but whereas the new one will cost say £200 plus £40 oil plus very little else, the 30 year old one could be £200 plus £40 oil plus £1000 for fixing things which have been discovered.

An Annual for a complex SEP should be about £1500+VAT. Or about £1800+VAT if it is N-reg

Hourly rates in GA maintenance are a lot lower than car maintenance. This is curious, and is perhaps the result of a competitive climate, dominated by customers willing to fly 50-100nm to get a cheaper (or perhaps "less fussy"?? ) 50hr check, and refusing to pay for anything if the bill comes to too much, which it often does due to the very high cost of some parts. This travelling for an away-service seems to be particularly prevalent among schools, operating under Transport CofA.
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Old 18th May 2006, 19:17
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Lots of money !

Most GA maintenance companys have not the first idea of customer service and communication and so when problems arise the customer is usualy the last to know, turning a job out on time is likely to never happen as there is no incentive of the maintenance company to do so.

I run a number of aircraft on lease and largly cover my companys maintenance so aircraft get fixed ASAP ( a week or so back a vac pump failed on a weekend and it was replaced within 2 hours of it being reported) but I have no end of trouble with contractors not meeting the time goals that they have set dispite the fact that invoices get paid almost by return, following a few years in the business the companys that have performed constantly well for my business and I am not conected with in any way except as a customer are Lees avionics, Phoenix avionics(for radio box repair) but so far the best service award has to go to Airpower who have overhauled three engines for my business in the last year or so two of these have been unschedualed and the turnround time has been seven days in all cases.

For parts supply Airparts at Booker are very good but for the items such as lubricants and chemicals that they don't stock I have had good service from LAS in Devon.

Most maintenance companys will give you a fixed price for a LAMS maintenance check added to this has to be AD's, defect rectification and parts, of late I have been shocked to find how one owner I know was taken to the cleaners by a maintenance company who told him that "one spark plug was faulty but they could find out which one so they changed all eight".

I have been in the past contracted to a flying group to "keep an eye" on there maintenance contractors, this helped both sides because my just being in the loop kept the maintenance company on there toes but I also recomended some preventative maintenance to the owners that the company felt would be seen as work generation, they were of course happy to carry out the extra work.

If I was a new owner I would get a licenced engineer on my side on to look over the work being done, not choose the cheapest quote and only use companys that other owners had recomended, I wish I could publish a hall of shame but I don't want to see PPrune in the courts
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Old 18th May 2006, 20:21
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Base yourself at a friendly farm strip and do most of the maintenance on site with a friendly engineer who will let you assist in doing much of the donkey work such as unscrewing cowlings, changing the oil filter etc and you will cut costs considerably.

You will also learn a lot about your aircraft and be in a much better position to realise when things are amiss on your daily walkround.

QDM

P.S. I understand that at Booker the proprietors will not let owners do anything at all to their aircraft in the hangar. Outrageous!
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Old 18th May 2006, 21:04
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I am so surprised at the respondents experiences. It is so far removed from the relationship I have with the company that maintain my aircraft. I own a full IFR single that is in constant use and my maintenance company (of very many years) are honest, helpful and absolutely trustworthy and do what they promise. They also trust me which is an essential part of the equation. I pay when collecting an aircraft from any maintenance work and never have I faced anything they did not clear with me first. They will also highlight anything that will need attention in the near future but is quite within limits at this time. In other words no nasty surprises unless something unforseen breaks.
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Old 18th May 2006, 21:27
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I understand that at Booker the proprietors will not let owners do anything at all to their aircraft in the hangar

This is very common. I have to take mine outside to do anything on it. Normally, "insurance" reasons are given

WorkingHard

You got lucky early on, perhaps. Others (like me) got lucky eventually, and others never get lucky. I am talking about finding a trustworthy maintenance firm of course, not getting laid

It's certainly very true that being able to do one's own maintenance is the key to getting a good job done and keeping costs down. I do my own 50hr checks (takes 3hrs plus cost of oil, £10 for the oil filter) but if you are a LAME (G-reg) or A&P (N-reg) you can do the whole lot, including Annuals. I don't know what will happen to individual LAMEs when EASA get into full swing.
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Old 18th May 2006, 22:27
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IO540

You are quite correct, this is because an aircraft owner that was working on his aircraft left a soldering iron on and went for a cup of tea.
Had the fire that had been started by the unattended soldering iron not been discoverd by passer-by the whole hangar would have caught fire and I would have had wait in line to hit the pratt who would have destroyed my aircraft.

The rule is a real pain but at lease it protects my aircraft from idiots.

As for a 50 hour check taking 3 hours, you can't be looking at much. Im hard pushed to do a 50 hour on one of my own Cessna 152's in less than 6 hours. just to get the cowls off, clean and gap the 12 plugs on an IO540, cut open the filter can, change the oil and inspect the airfilter would take 2 hours..................... so just what do you look at on the airframe in ONE hour?

Last edited by A and C; 18th May 2006 at 22:39.
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Old 19th May 2006, 06:50
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On my permit a/c it does take a full day to remove the cowls, inspection hatches, floorboards, oil change, oil filter clean, remove spats, inspect brakes, remove spinner, grease prop hub, inspect flying and landing wires, inspect and lubricate flying control system. I do all the work myself then have my inspector an A&C, go through it with me.

I normally don't get it back together to do the flight test until the following day!


Stik
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Old 19th May 2006, 06:52
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Sorry A&C, 3hrs with two of us doing it. The other is an A&P friend.

Most of my 50hr check is visual inspection, which is quick. In fact most of the airframe inspection items listed in the 50hr list I do on every preflight check.

Cowling removal takes 5 mins for the top one, another 10 for the bottom one. (2 people are necessary) Prop spinner must be removed to safely remove the lower cowling without damage (most maint firms don't know this); this is 5 mins. Drain the oil out (including taking a sample for analysis) is an elapsed time of about 30 mins during which one does other things. Oil filter takes 10 mins including wirelocking the new one. Oil strainer at the base of the engine takes 20 mins including wirelocking.

Plugs come out in about 10 mins. They are iridium. The top ones are always spotless. The bottom ones always have some deposits but these come out with a special fine-wire tool. I run LOP all the time except climb so there is nothing else to clean. I'd guess 30 mins to do all 12 plugs.

We then run the engine with the cowlings off and check for any leaks.

The price list cost of a 50hr check on mine is £220+VAT I think, which is only a few hours' work. So it's about right.

Evidently some planes are easier to work on than others.
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Old 19th May 2006, 07:30
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IO540 - I believe that I have twice as many wings, twice as many ailerons and getting my cowling off and on without scratching is easy with two but possible single handedly, however it will take almost three times as long!

Then in the engine bay I have several more hoses and fittings than you, unless of course your Cessna has an inverted system and smoke!

I change my oil and clean the screen every 25hrs - the waste is used to lube the hangar doors but also to augment my supply of creosote!

Stik
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Old 19th May 2006, 07:31
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The shame of it is that most people will only flag up the bad experiences and very rarely compliment the better organisations.

Some try their hardest to do a proper job (without going over the top) and charge a reasonable rate (remeber the hourly rate is well under half what you are probably paying to have your car serviced).

Find a good manintenance outfit (by reputation - ask for registrations of customers aircraft perhaps and see how satisfied they are). Also, stick to one place so they get to know your aircraft. Don't think it's best to keep moving it around following the cheapest quote.

All organisations should provide quotes for the basic checks with parts and defect rectification/ADs etc charged on top. Keep in touch whilst the work is done and ask to see any offending part that needs replacing.

Some of us are aircraft owners and know only too well the costs involved!
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Old 21st May 2006, 08:13
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IO540

So that would be 6 man hours .................. much closer to what I would have expected.
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Old 21st May 2006, 12:59
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A 50hr check on a TB20 is a lot less than 6 hours. But it does need two people around to do it, even if just for the cowlings.

Next time I will time it
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Old 21st May 2006, 16:24
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Originally Posted by A and C
As for a 50 hour check taking 3 hours, you can't be looking at much. Im hard pushed to do a 50 hour on one of my own Cessna 152's in less than 6 hours. just to get the cowls off, clean and gap the 12 plugs on an IO540, cut open the filter can, change the oil and inspect the airfilter would take 2 hours..................... so just what do you look at on the airframe in ONE hour?

Lordy, an IO540 in a Cessna 152, bet that goes fast
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Old 21st May 2006, 17:42
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So can I assume that 110.5 hours labour for an annual check on a PA28 (before additional work) is a bit toppy?
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Old 21st May 2006, 18:10
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readability5

You have been had!

The LAMS tasks on an annual check should take about 3.5 working days, in total about 28 man hours, depending on what is due in terms of AD's the cost will go up somewhat but the real unknown is the defects, i have seen these go past £10,000 in the worst case of PA28 corrosion that I have seen.

Parts are another thing that will push the price up if a landing gear leg fails the AD on the luggs the parts will cost you around £ 1600 and it will take about 12-14 hours of labour to fit.
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Old 21st May 2006, 21:29
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I stand to be corrected here but in my experience it would take one person more than 3.5 days to carry out the LAMS Annual inspections on a PA28.

Just to do the engine inspection would be the best part of a day alone (ground run to ground run, cowlings on and off, oil, filters, compression check, exhaust, ignition timing etc etc).

As for the airframe that includes removing all the inspection panels, interior trim etc and refitting it after. Jacking the aircraft up (and lowering it after), removing all the wheels, regreasing wheel bearings, battery, instruments, filters etc etc. And you can't inspect anything until it's clean.

Then there is the paperwork.....

What you can't do is divide the total cost for the inspection by the hourly rate and say it is going to take x hours, iot never works out like that. Most maintenance companies give a fixed price for say fixed gear or retractable aircraft. Some aircraft are more labour intensive than others (Chipmunks, Bulldogs for instance).

If anyone claims they can do ALL the LAMS Annual tasks in 28 hrs their either very efficient or not doing it as well as it could be done!

Aircraft are labour intensive beasts, much more so than cars. The Annual inspection for a light aircraft isn't that much more than a modern equally expensive car, or am I not really in the real world?

Standing by to be corrected!
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Old 21st May 2006, 21:33
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For what it's worth, the Annual on a TB20 is about 45 hours.

The other thing is that some firms are well organised. You take the plane in, and four engineers jump on it and get on with it and you get it back the same week. At others, most others I think, one man plods along for four weeks, in between other jobs.
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Old 22nd May 2006, 10:32
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Documentaion

I have also had a poor experience with a A28 Annual - I am new to group ownership so this is my first example. Even if you assume the work was done correctly (which I don't) the documentation has been abysmal with the receipts and work sheets bearing no relation to either the check requirements or additional work. Anyone else had a similar experience? I would have expected this to be a tightly regulated and checked activity???
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