Sabremech wrote:
Was it the first time you've taken it to this mechanic? If so, that could explain the hours as it's an airplane that he hasn't seen and can't take for granted that it's been maintained correctly. I'll say that the first time I do an inspection on a new to me aircraft, that these hours don't seem out of line.
From a mechanics perspective, our certificates come with a lot of training, cost and responsibilty. That shouldn't equate to cheap annual signoffs for pilots and aircraft owners.
David
I agree that a new-to-me aircraft takes more time for me to determine it's condition, but I don't expect the customer to pay for my learning, unless it is previously agreed on. I may add a few extra hours for an inspection quote, if I am unfamiliar with the aircraft, but it is still the owner's choice to accept/reject my offer.
IMO, the general physical condition of GA aircraft has been constantly declining for decades. It is not unusual to find a fair number of suspect repairs, covered up damage, and logbook discrepancies that require extra time to resolve, and owners know up front that they will be billed for it.
I hear ya on the cheap pencil-whipping signoffs. I still get the "$1500 annual" expectation from owners, even with thrashed 40 year old complex twins. Unfortunately, more and more shops have sunk to that level, just to survive. We are seeing companies with several bizjets, price shopping and hardballing shops to get prices that are about 65% of what they paid five years ago. Quality of workmanship isn't even a consideration anymore. I had a Caravan in for inspection, that had previously been maintained for years by a competitor. Many of the inspection panels still had unblemished factory paint, never opened since first flight. The owners didn't care. They got inspections signed off for 1/3rd of what a real inspection cost.