by Ed Asmus » Fri Dec 05, 2014 3:34 pm
Richard,
My first post may have been a little too brief. Because you are trying to solve a vibration problem and you or your shop suspects a chance it could be the prop, if balancing the prop is what you want to try, you can certainly do that. No overhaul, reseal, or anything else is required to accomplish the balancing. Plenty of shops will be willing to do that. "Continuous maintenance" as Pat mentioned is a good thing and I'm in agreement with that. 15 years would be longer then I would go without having the prop disassembled, inspected, and resealed even though it is not required maintenance by regulation. What you need to make sure is you UNDERSTAND what is REQUIRED by regulation and what is not. Just because a shop says something has to be done doesn't make it true. I'm not saying that means you should not consider the advice but you need to understand what you have a choice on and what you don't. Maintenance, like flying, is about good judgement and common sense. There are some things in airplanes we can operate to failure with an acceptable increase in risk. There are somethings in airplanes we cannot operate to failure because it causes an unacceptable increase in risk. Operating a prop to failure would cause an unacceptable increase in risk so as a result, props require periodic disassembly and inspection. (This does not need to be an overhaul necessarily). My personal choice has been to send my props out every 5 years for inspection and reseal though I am considering lengthening the interval by a year or two because over the last 24 years of airplane ownership, my experience has taught me that nothing has been discovered on previous inspections to cause alarm. My aircraft are stored in heated hangers in the midwest. If I lived in Florida for example, my methods would be very different. That nice warm muggy salt air does bad things for airplanes so common sense and good judgement would dictate more aggressive maintenance procedures. Do you get the idea? I hope this helps. I remember my first experience with airplane ownership decades ago. It was a 180 PA24. The maintenance bills were shocking. I know how you feel. Airplanes are wonderful but they do come at a substantial price. Good luck!
Ed