As a general rule no, it would not. As I said, maintenance could read X tach time in the airplane and coincide that with Y engine time.Thanks, that's the times I saw on a c150 I looked at recently. So I can assume that the 1444 does not represent time since new or time since overhaul on the engine? Also, as a general rule would the tach time represent time since overhaul?
Under part 91. But yes, as long as it's not making metal and the compressions are good, keep flying it. Most piston airplane engines are very lower power and very low stress, they'll run forever.There is no problem with taking a well maintained engine past TBO.
And also under part 135 if approved.Under part 91. But yes, as long as it's not making metal and the compressions are good, keep flying it. Most piston airplane engines are very lower power and very low stress, they'll run forever.
There are very few piston engines I can visualize wanting to run much further than TBO. The lyc 540k series would be a good candidate, TCM just upped TBO on frequently flown factory IO520s to 2100 hours and I feel that's too long. Actually I feel that any hours is too long for that catastrophe of an engine design that for some reason is one of the most popular in the state.And also under part 135 if approved.
You'll need to look at the logbooks.Thanks that's a real eye opener. I didn't know tach time could be so cryptic. The reason I ask is the cessna may be available through a family friend but I only had time so swing by the airport and look inside. I was wondering about engine time before next overhaul was due.
Ah, the old "it's not safe to go beyond TBO" old wives tale. As with most OWT, no historic or factual basis.There are very few piston engines I can visualize wanting to run much further than TBO. The lyc 540k series would be a good candidate, TCM just upped TBO on frequently flown factory IO520s to 2100 hours and I feel that's too long. Actually I feel that any hours is too long for that catastrophe of an engine design that for some reason is one of the most popular in the state.
I make my living managing a fleet of big piston engines. I've seen enough to know that many of them shouldn't go beyond TBO. Like I said there's a few out there that are good candidates but the big bore contis should just go straight in the trash at TBO. Or when they come out of the factory.Ah, the old "it's not safe to go beyond TBO" old wives tale. As with most OWT, no historic or factual basis.
http://www.avweb.com/news/savvyaviator/187037-1.html
Well there has to be something to it or it wouldn't be regulatory for 135/121.Ah, the old "it's not safe to go beyond TBO" old wives tale. As with most OWT, no historic or factual basis.
http://www.avweb.com/news/savvyaviator/187037-1.html
I make my living managing a fleet of big piston engines. I've seen enough to know that many of them shouldn't go beyond TBO. Like I said there's a few out there that are good candidates but the big bore contis should just go straight in the trash at TBO. Or when they come out of the factory.
I'm not real familiar with the 470s, they seem to have an ok record on the 182 etc, but the 520F in particular is my nemesis. Knock on wood I've had better luck with the 550F but still...I know...let's put pushrods, intake, and exhaust all on the same side of the cylinder, then design them so that cylinder problems are endemic to the species, and finally mount it in an airplane with no removable lower cowl...QFT.
Oh and by big bore, you mean anything bigger than the O-200 right?
and finally mount it in an airplane with no removable lower cowl...
Then there's starter adapters, finicky fuel systems, and did I mention cylinder problems? And lack of accessibility of anything?
Actually it is possible for 135/121 to exceed TBO. That is another OWT. Since you did not bother reading my link I'll quote it for you:Well there has to be something to it or it wouldn't be regulatory for 135/121.
Part of this is blatantly false. It's not a matter of whether you have service bulletin compliance written into your ops specs, OpSpec D101 requires a list of TBO limited items and their intervals, and at least at my FSDO they are very reluctant to grant anything other than what the manufacturer has published.Actually it is possible for 135/121 to exceed TBO. That is another OWT. Since you did not bother reading my link I'll quote it for you:
"Not so. Both Lycoming and TCM publish engine TBOs in the form of non-mandatory service bulletins. Some Part 121/135 operators have Operations Specifications that require them to comply with all manufacturer's service bulletins (even non-mandatory ones), while others have Op Specs that require compliance only with mandatory service bulletins. Those in the latter group are no more obligated to comply with published TBO than are Part 91 operators. Those in the former group might theoretically be required to overhaul at published TBO, but most such operators request TBO extensions from their FSDO and these are routinely granted, often for as much as 50% over the engine manufacturer's published TBO. So, in actual practice, published TBO is hardly ever compulsory for any operators -- commercial or non-commercial."