About 1 1/2 years ago I bought a Comanche 260B, N79RG, with the Century 2000 autopilot connected to a Century Attitude gyro. During the test flight the autopilot failed and the plane began to porpoise and got worse with each cycle. The previous owner was furious with this because he said that he only had 20 hours on the plane since it was repaired for the same problem the last time.The previous owner said that he would take care of the problem if I bought the plane and we looked eachother in the eye and shook hands on it as we made the deal for the aircraft. Naturally, the worthless jerk renigged on the deal and when the bill came back at $675.00 he said that I took too long getting it serviced and he was no longer responsible. (I don't know that the liar put a time restraint on his promise or what he was thinking constituted a long time, it was only 3 months.)
Since then, the autopilot has failed in exactly the same manner, 2 additional times. So, the first time it was sent back for porpoising by the previous owner, it lasted just under 20 flight hours on the tach. Then it failed during the test flight, so I took it out and sent it in, ended up paying for the repair, and then installed it and started flying it again. It lasted 18 hrs this time. Now, Scott, down at Century thinks that maybe I screwed it up on installation somehow, so, he asked me to bring it in to an avionics shop and have somebody that is qualified do the work. No problem!! I brought it to Beacon Avionics in Lansing, Michigan and told them to have at it. Chuck told me that he would have it out and sent out in a day.
I asked Chuck if he would keep it inside for me during the next couple of weeks because I didn't have any way of securing the ailerons or stabilator during high winds. He said he would be glad to do this for me. Funny thing, 2 days later I'm flying commercial airlines out of Lansing and there's my plane, sitting outside, right where I left it. An then, 10 days later, when I'm coming back into Lansing, I look out and there's my plane again, sitting outside, in a slightly different area.
Not that this was a big deal, he took it in and warmed it up for me before I came to pick it up. The problem came in when I did the runup after getting my clearance to take off at the end of the taxiway. The yoke would not turn right. It would move to flat and level from left, but would go no further. (I found out that while I was on vacation, the plane sat out it a wind storm, exactly what I warned him about) I had to ask the tower for taxi instructions back to Beacon Aviation and to please contact the pilot, (who was now on his way back to his home airport) to turn around and come back to pick me up and give me a ride home. Chuck and his technicians felt real bad about it and they did fix it the next day. It needed to be rerigged, imagine that!
To their credit, during the installation of the attitude indicator they changed the filter and tube on the input side of the attitude indicator and the auto pilot did work and locked on the altitude and heading without the slightest waver. But for my $1700.00, they also broke wires on the inside of the instrument panel which I had to repair and when they rerigged it they didn't do it right and I had to have it done over again by my mechanic.
This time the autopilot lasted 13 hours. Then it failed, again, in the specific, exact, same way. So again, I tear my plane apart and there it sits again, for another month while these incompetent idiots work on it again, the fourth time, with no confidence that it will work right for any length of time in the future. Guess what, yep, you got it, even under warranty, they come up with this; the attitude indicator bearings have to be changed out because there was all kinds of debris in the indicator this time. Funny thing, they just had this thing totally apart to inspect the bearings and replaced a list of componants as long as my arm just 13 hours ago and made no mention of the debris on the bearings.
What kind of crap is this. I sent it to Beacon aviation because Century said that they wanted some one who knew what they were doing to take care of the install. I do this, they put a brand new filter and inlet tube on it, but now, somehow, the attitude indicator is full of black debris and they need to change bearings and it's going to cost me another $1200.00 so that in another 10-15 hours it can fail because they still haven't fixed the root cause of the problem and so they can charge me again.
Does anybody have any idea of someone who is a competent, honest, reasonable individual that will do an honest, solid job, fix this thing once and for all so that I don't have to deal with liars and incompetent technicians?