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"My A&P took a look, sure enough, said I have never seen anything like
this." He's never worked on Mooney then has he. :-) One thing about Mooney's, either they are leaking now, or they will be :-) We have some seepage that has appeared on our '79 M20J. We are monitoring it but we will probably reseal the tanks when it warms up next spring. I think it is 5-6k or more... Ouch!! At least the Mooney has plenty of access panels in the tanks. I think they knew they would eventually leak so they left you a way to get in there to clean out the old sealant and apply the new. Oh well what are ya going to do. Let us know how yours turns out Allen. I feel for ya.. Jon Kraus PP-ASEL-IA Student Mooney Owner A Lieberman wrote: On Sat, 18 Dec 2004 13:38:17 GMT, Jon Kraus wrote: Has anyone found owning more expensive than renting? :-) After my major overhaul after an inflight cylinder failure on my 1976 Sundowner. I thought I was through the "worst" case scenario, but a new problem is about to bite me in my rear end that has my A&P scratching his head..... Last flight, I noticed under the wing root, some blue dye on my nice shiny white paint. Thought, ok, maybe when I was topped off, that some fuel dripped down and left it's traces. Wiped it off, nothing leaking, so I thought.... Flew the plane, landed, no obvious signs of leaking. Today, go out, same thing, just enough leakage, that it doesn't make it to the bottom of the fusalage, nothing on the ground, yet I have a fuel leak from the root of the wing. My A&P took a look, sure enough, said I have never seen anything like this. The Sundowner doesn't have any access panels to the fuel tanks! Everything is riveted tight as a drum. So.... now do I have a leaky fuel tank, or do I have a fuel line problem. A&P said run it today, with the warmer weather and see if I get seepage. Came back, sure enough, very fine strip of blue from fuel seeping out. I wiped it off after the flight, to see if I get any seepage. I am figuring if no seepage, then there is a good chance it's a fuel line leaking under pressure. I asked for the tank to be topped off as well. Either way, it's going to be very expensive to repair.... If it's the tank, the entire wing will probably have to be removed from what I gather, as it does not appear to be "bladders" according to my A&P. Total time on airframe is 2253, so be very careful in buying "underused" airplanes. Sitting on the ramp is worse then being used on a regular basis as I am learning the hard way. Allen |
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