Apparently, the $65 dollar figure was for paying an
A&P the going rate at a metropolitan airport for a
minimum of 1 hour's work to make the pen and ink entry
into the maintenance manual.
I was considering recommending one of these gliders
to a student; too bad!
At 03:24 08 December 2005, Shawn wrote:
Greg Arnold wrote:
Do I correctly understand the AD below to mean that
any Pegasus in the
US with 3000 hours cannot be flown after January 6,
2006? Certainly
would have an effect of the market value of this glider,
even one with
significantly less than 3000 hours. I notice that
someone put one on
the market today on the SSA site at $15,000 (it has
3300 hours), which
seems somewhat high for glider that can only be flown
for the next month.
http://www.airweb.faa.gov/Regulatory...ibrary/rgad.ns
f/0/29A8C5DEB81B323F862570BD005416CE?OpenDocument
Wow! A million dollars or so worth of gliders (51
ships times $20K
each) rendered (pun intended) nearly worthless at 3000
hours. FAA
estimates the cost per ship at $65. Instruments and
various bits and
pieces will have some 'scrap' value, but as ships are
retired there will
be a glut of parts decreasing their value. :-(
Also, this was part of the AD:
'Comments
Was the public invited to comment? We provided the
public the
opportunity to participate in developing this AD. We
received no
comments on the proposal or on the determination of
the cost to the
public.'
I assume the reason *no one* commented, was because
most owners heard
nothing??? Does the FAA notify owners of pending ADs
(don't recall any
with my ship)? Perhaps the SSA should check periodically
for such
things if they don't already.
Any recourse? Major Bummer if not.
Shawn