FAA Wants To Add Cardinals To Cessna Spar AD

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Key Takeaways:

  • The FAA proposes expanding an existing Airworthiness Directive (AD) to require inspections of carry-through spars on thousands of additional Cessna 210 (models N, R, P210, T210) and Cessna 177 Cardinal aircraft.
  • This expansion is due to the discovery of spar issues in newer models and Cardinals, not just the older 210s covered by the original AD.
  • The required inspections involve visual and eddy current checks, corrective actions if needed, application of protective coatings, and reporting results to the FAA, with an estimated cost of $1,827.50 per inspection.
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The FAA wants to expand the AD requiring inspection of the carry-through spars on Cessna 210s to more models of that type and to some versions of the 177 Cardinal. The agency issued a Notice of Proposed Rulemaking requiring inspection of the spars on almost 2,000 additional aircraft that were captured by an earlier AD that took effect a year ago. Specifically, the NPRM, which will be open to public comments until June 25, now includes 3,421 U.S. aircraft models 210N, 210R, P210N, P210R, T210N, T210R, 177, 177A, 177B, 177RG, and F177RG.

The original AD applied to older 210s but since then examples have been found in newer models and the Cardinals. Operators must perform “visual and eddy current inspections of the [carry-through] spar lower cap, corrective action if necessary, application of a protective coating and corrosion inhibiting compound (CIC), and reporting the inspection results to the FAA.” Each inspection will cost about $1827.50 according to FAA calculations.

Russ Niles

Russ Niles is Editor-in-Chief of AVweb. He has been a pilot for 30 years and joined AVweb 22 years ago. He and his wife Marni live in southern British Columbia where they also operate a small winery.
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