Thanks Dan,
Jim, I'll bet that the guy who cleared you for the ferry
flight didn't offer
to ride along with you. You really dodged a bullet, that
engine should be
considered Trash! (Note capital "T").
Dan
Schaefer
As with most things Experimental, no one really told me it was OK and for
me to go fly it. This is how it happened; When the first engine guy thought is
was Gears, both he a I said that is defiantly Not flyable. Then the second
engine guy who did the Borescope and looked at the Gears said he couldn't find
any evidence of any kind on the gears he could see. However, he could not see
the Cam gear form the top. Then the third TCM guy said it was definitely
Lifters. So I asked questions about it's fly ability, Like do you think it will
live for a 2 hr flight? Do you think it could cause a Sudden engine
stoppage?
Where it was at it would either have to have the engine shipped out,
if I could find someone to remove it on that field, or the closest shop was a 20
min. ferry flight. Even that guy said that if it was flyable for 20
min. then I just as well fly the 2 hrs to where the engine would have been
shipped to anyway.
My soul searching and engine knowledge told me that with a lifter failure I
could see a Loss of Power, in which case I would land at closest airport. Or
worse; Loss of Oil pressure, in which case the same applies. But the chances of
a Sudden Engine Stoppage was very slim. I chose a test flight above the airport
for 20 min. and then go if everything was OK. No one will ever tell you to fly
with a known engine problem.
Hell, I had just survived a drive in my Aston Martin DB9 form San Jose, CA.
to Las Vegas, to Sedona, AZ. and lived through that, but not without pain. The
seat is only a 2 hr. seat and I spent 7.5 and 4 hrs in two days. Could hardly
stand up. And the 460 HP didn't even scare me.
Life is risky. Almost all my aircraft failures have been with Certified
equipment. The Experimental stuff has been much better.
NOT careless,
Jim Hergert
N6XE (An
Sexy)