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New Piper Wing Spar AD Affects
5,400 Aircraft
Owners
of Piper PA-28 and PA-32 models have been hit with a series of airworthiness
directives over the last year, including one related to main-spar corrosion, but
the latest AD stems from a fatal accident in 2018 when a Piper Arrow conducting
flight training lost a wing and killed the FAA examiner and student. The Arrow
was 11 years old but had accumulated more than 7,600 hours, exclusively in the
training environment.
The
most recent AD calls for inspections of the lower spar caps at the bolted joint
to the carry-through structure inside the cabin for aircraft with more than
5,000 hours time in service and applies to more than 5,400 aircraft. The
accident Arrow’s wing failed due to a fatigue fracture at the “bolted joint”
along the lower spar cap, according to investigators. The AD is effective on
Feb. 16, 2021, and affects PA-28 and PA-32 aircraft from the PA-28-151 Warrior
up to the PA-32RT Saratoga. It also includes all Arrow models, but not the
PA-28-236 Dakota or the lighter non-taper-wing PA-28 series.
According to the FAA, “Because airplanes used in
training and other high-load environments are typically operated for hire and
have inspection programs that require 100-hour inspections, the FAA determined
the number of 100-hour inspections an airplane has undergone would be the best
indicator of the airplane’s usage history. Accordingly, the FAA developed a
factored service hours formula based on the number of 100-hour inspections
completed on the airplane. This AD requires calculating the factored service
hours for each main wing spar to determine when an inspection is required,
inspecting the lower main wing spar bolt holes for cracks, and replacing any
cracked main wing spar.” In short, the inspection portion of the AD applies when
any given airplane has accumulated more than 5,000 “factored service hours,” a
determination that had to be made within 30 days of the AD’s implementation by
reviewing the logbooks and counting the number of 100-hour inspections
determined to be associated with flight-training use.
Aircraft with more than 5,000 factored service hours
must have the eddy-current inspection performed within the next 100 hours. The
test is said to cost just more than $1,000 per aircraft, though a wing-spar
replacement is estimated at more than $12,000 each wing. What’s more, the FAA
says it will not issue ferry permits to those aircraft found to have cracks;
they will have to be repaired locally or disassembled and taken to an
appropriate service facility. Finally, the FAA is calling this AD an “interim”
measure, suggesting that data from the field could change the minimum number of
service hours.
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