Welcome to Flightinfo.com

  • Register now and join the discussion
  • Friendliest aviation Ccmmunity on the web
  • Modern site for PC's, Phones, Tablets - no 3rd party apps required
  • Ask questions, help others, promote aviation
  • Share the passion for aviation
  • Invite everyone to Flightinfo.com and let's have fun

TBO and rental ops

Welcome to Flightinfo.com

  • Register now and join the discussion
  • Modern secure site, no 3rd party apps required
  • Invite your friends
  • Share the passion of aviation
  • Friendliest aviation community on the web

Jpilot23

YAY!!
Joined
Jun 29, 2004
Posts
104
Was wondering if an aircraft is over its TBO, can you still rent the aircraft out and flight instruct in it. Thanks for the help.

p.s. Sorry if this has been a topic thats been brought up time and time again.
 
Yes, if its used under part 91 it can be but its not recommended by the manufacturer.

I knew of a Cessna 152 that had over 3200 hours on the engine, that was still running strong, and was used to instruct in.

If its a strong engine with good compressions, it shouldn't be a problem. Have an oil analysis done every 100 hours, and make sure the oil pump/hoses have been overhauled/replaced etc. I'd advise talking to a knowledgeable mechanic about the particular engine you plan to do this with.

Some Part 135 operators that I know about, have actually had the manufacturer approve a particular operation of an engine, so as to increase the 'standard' TBO - Ameriflight's Navajo/Chieftains for example.
 
Civil liability should be a concern when operating over TBO. TBO becomes somewhat nebulous when you're past the first run of an engine (ie, new). Has an engine that's been "topped" been overhauled, and is the TBO reset? No. Has an engine that's had a shade tree overhaul be expected to make the full TBO interval again? No. Often an "overhaul" means nothing more than checking parts to see if they're in tolerance and reinstalling them. In fact, in accordance with 14 CFR 43.2(a)(2), a part need only be tested to manufacturer specifications be "overhauled."

The engine may be fine for another thousand hours, or it may not.

The question you need to ask yourself isn't weather getting away with it is lega, but how much of your life, that of your student, that of those on the ground, your reputation, your certificate, and your future, present, and past, you're willing to bet on the matter.
 
thanks for the info. This doesn't concern me directly, it was basically a debate between me and another pilot who is not a CFI. There is a club on our field that is operating a '98 172 that has 2500 hours on the engine. He said they couldn't instruct, i said they can.

Personally if i trusted the mech and if it kept making compressions and ran fine i'd teach in it. I have also done this in the past.
 
Ah, good compressions. The layman's false security blanket. Good compressions sell engines, sell airplanes. Good compressions also mean nothing.

If that's your yardstick for safety, then you're due for a nasty awakening one day. Hopefully it doesn't hurt you too badly.
 
avbug said:
Ah, good compressions. The layman's false security blanket. Good compressions sell engines, sell airplanes. Good compressions also mean nothing.

If that's your yardstick for safety, then you're due for a nasty awakening one day. Hopefully it doesn't hurt you too badly.


Thank you for your concern. Next time i'll watch out for those pesty good compressions. I pray next 100 hr my plane fails.
 
avbug said:
Ah, good compressions. The layman's false security blanket.

I agree (although I'm just a pilot) Hoses, and accessories have a life expectancy also...is this where you are coming from avbug? If there is more to it I would love to know.
 
No. Pilots and owners bow down and worship compressions as the holy grail of engine life. Mechanics laugh. Pilots also look at oil color as if it means anything, too. Mechanics laugh.

Compression goes up and down with engine temperature, the operator testing it, the test set in use, ring gap alignment, the way one holds one's mouth, and the phase of the moon.

General guidelines exist for replacing a cylinder if compression gets too low (generally less than 75% of the tested pressure), but that's it.

Test an engine over several days, or several times in one day, you'll get different compression readings. Test it with different test sets, and you'll get different readings. Have different personnel test it, and you'll get different readings. Change the metal temperature, and you'll get different readings. And so on, and so on, and so on.

As long as those compressions are good, the airplane must be good, right? No need to mike and magnaflux the crank...leave it all in there and just do compression tests until they get too low to use. No need to do spectrographic engine oil analysis...just check compressions until they get too low to use. The camshaft will last forever. It's the compressions you need to worry about. Don't worry about the oil seals or oil pump...they'll far outlast the compressions. Engines are designed so that nothing will go wrong so long as the compressions are good.

In fact, the true test of the engine's health doesn't require looking beyond the nice shiny paint job. If that's okay, so is everything else.

The accessory drive lasts forever...or at least, until compressions get low. So do the mags, internally. Valves...they never need attention. As long as the compressions are good, the valves will be okay.

I pray next 100 hr my plane fails.

It's not often we have a truly stupid quote to address here, but that was it. Definitely that was it.

Personally if i trusted the mech and if it kept making compressions and ran fine i'd teach in it.

Now that one was ignorant, but not stupid. Not entirely, anyway. Ignorance is bliss.
 
There is a reason why that TBO is established. Especially in an environment where the engine is getting abused I am not even sure if an engine can make it to the TBO in a very healthy manner.

The other question is you have the 2000 hrs (in the case of the 98 172 you mentioned) as a hard limit established on the engine. If you go beyon it when is the next limit you are going to use? 100 more hours, 200 more hours? until it quits?

We have a PA-38 with 100 hr left on the engine. You can bet that the engine is coming off and is going to an overhaul when the time is due. $16,000 that i will spend on it is much cheaper than people's lives and the lawsuits that we will face.

This is one of those cases of "it's legal, but is it safe?"
 

Latest resources

Back
Top