jrh
Well-Known Member
I've been searching for a while, and even Google hasn't given me the answer to this one...
When is a yellow tag needed for an aircraft part, and how does one go about getting a yellow tag for a part?
I'm asking because the master solenoid went out in my Cessna 140 yesterday.
Cessna, in all their overpriced glory, charges $432 for a new solenoid.
I asked my mechanic about getting a used solenoid and he said I could, but for him to be able to install it, it would need to come with a yellow tag.
I started Googling to learn more about the yellow tag process and the only thing I could find was a book called "Aircraft Ownership" by Ron Wanttaja who says yellow tags should be issued by the new mechanic who is installing the used part in the new plane.
This seems to contradict what my mechanic said, because he made it sound like the part needed to come with a yellow tag already issued, issued by the mechanic who pulled the part out of the salvaged plane.
To add more to my confusion, another mechanic friend of mine told me to just do the work myself, yellow tag or not. Unbolt the old solenoid, bolt in the new (used) one, and nobody would know the difference.
I contacted my type club and a guy offered to sell me a used master solenoid for $35. That sounds like a pretty good deal, but I don't think it comes with a yellow tag.
So, what should I do? I want to keep things safe, legal, and affordable. Hopefully the three aren't mutually exclusive in this case.
When is a yellow tag needed for an aircraft part, and how does one go about getting a yellow tag for a part?
I'm asking because the master solenoid went out in my Cessna 140 yesterday.
Cessna, in all their overpriced glory, charges $432 for a new solenoid.
I asked my mechanic about getting a used solenoid and he said I could, but for him to be able to install it, it would need to come with a yellow tag.
I started Googling to learn more about the yellow tag process and the only thing I could find was a book called "Aircraft Ownership" by Ron Wanttaja who says yellow tags should be issued by the new mechanic who is installing the used part in the new plane.
This seems to contradict what my mechanic said, because he made it sound like the part needed to come with a yellow tag already issued, issued by the mechanic who pulled the part out of the salvaged plane.
To add more to my confusion, another mechanic friend of mine told me to just do the work myself, yellow tag or not. Unbolt the old solenoid, bolt in the new (used) one, and nobody would know the difference.
I contacted my type club and a guy offered to sell me a used master solenoid for $35. That sounds like a pretty good deal, but I don't think it comes with a yellow tag.
So, what should I do? I want to keep things safe, legal, and affordable. Hopefully the three aren't mutually exclusive in this case.