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![]() RST Engineering wrote: wrote in message ... If the airplane was going through an annual inspection, the IA should have generated a list of discrepancies of what didn't pass and given that to the owner. At that point the annual was complete. I'm not sure what you are saying. That the airplane has a current valid annual at this point? That isn't so. THe logbook should have contained words to the effect that the aircraft was inspected on (date) and a list of unairworthy items given to the owner or operator. I was saying the annual inspection was complete and current at that point and if there were any unairworthy items, they need to be attended to. The IA had completed his duties and is no longer involved. Once he signs off the annual inspection, whether airworthy or not, the inspection is complete and current. If the airplane is "ratty" but the mag switch(es) had been installed in accordance with the type certificate in effect as of date of manufacture and there were no subsequent ADs to change it, then the IA cannot on his own hook declare them unairworthy. Similarly, if the fabric punched "at the bottom of the airworthy scale" then the fabric is airworthy. THe IA does not get to set a higher standard than the FAA requires. An ordinary A&P could then bring the aircraft back to airworthinness condition without the need for the IA. That's true, but the aircraft still does not have a current annual inspection. The inspection is current and complete, but not airworthy. That inspection will be current for the next year and if it was not airworthy it can be brought into airworthiness and flown during that time period. The A&P has 0% authority with the inspection process. I don't believe that there is anywhere where the FSDO could have demanded anything except to do a ramp inspection after the aircraft had been flying. They can demand green cheese. What they get or are entitled to get are two separate matters. Jim |
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