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Cracked spars on Seneca's

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It probably doesn't help that senecas are fairly hard to land well and lots of people seem to plop them in pretty hard. When I moved from Florida I found a local flight school advertising a seneca so I went by to ask about renting it some. When I got there and asked, the instructor said I was too late someone had dropped theirs in from about ten feet and driven the gear right through the wings.
 
Fuzzy_is_Hungry said:
This just happened to a friend of mine who flies a Seneca II. All but one of the bolts had sheared off and the mechanic almost had the gear collapse driving it into the hangar.

We DID have the gear collapse-- the trunion bolt was never found so we can't tell if it was failure or had come loose. luckily it was on post- flight taxi, I try not to think of what would have happened if it would have gone south on landing..
 
Thanks guys, I have a couple hundred hours in Senecas and I was aware of the upcoming AD involving the forward gear, I just had not heard anything involving wing spars and gear trunions until now. If anyone has especially any info on what the CAA did with this flight school in england though that would be interesting to hear. I would think that if the CAA was to require inspections that the FAA could not be too far behind.
 
avbug said:
Same thing happened at a firm where I flew some time ago. Several pilots at a particular station who were flying Seneca II and III airplanes called me to tell me about an aircraft that made a popping sound each time they applied flaps on the base leg.

thats interesting, an archer i often fly sometimes (not always) has a popping sound when the flaps are applied on base. Somebody had told me that is just the flaps moving around in the tracks, i wonder if its something that should be looked at a little closer...
 
JRSLim said:
We DID have the gear collapse-- the trunion bolt was never found so we can't tell if it was failure or had come loose. luckily it was on post- flight taxi, I try not to think of what would have happened if it would have gone south on landing..
Shaun,

We have something in common. I had the right main collapse on rollout doing about 70 knots. Luckily it fell in and aft between the flap and the runway. There was a 600 foot skidmark that ended about 2 inches from the right edge of the runway. Whew!! Plane was still parallel with the centerline, I must say. Can you say "left rudder"?

Seriously though, this thread makes the hair on the back of my neck stand up.

-J
 
joe_pilot said:
Shaun,

We have something in common. I had the right main collapse on rollout doing about 70 knots. Luckily it fell in and aft between the flap and the runway. There was a 600 foot skidmark that ended about 2 inches from the right edge of the runway. Whew!! Plane was still parallel with the centerline, I must say. Can you say "left rudder"?

Seriously though, this thread makes the hair on the back of my neck stand up.

-J

I had the same thing happen in a cherokee 140... it is a known problem. Fortunatly it was not ruled an accident or anything and the airplane was flying the next day, unfortunatly my student and I got to experience the grass on the side of the runway.
 

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