dickwolff wrote:
... and now, a DW rant: It boggles my mind that a such fundamental problem can exist on a Primary Flight Control of an 1100 hr. airplane. The rudder not contacting either stop should have been found during the build, the FAA (or DAR) inspection, 30 annual condition inspections, or any of the 100's of pre-flight inspections. Just saying.
I shouldn't make this post but I am going to anyway....I find very easy to believe a problem like that can make it that long and go uncorrected. I have seen equally shocking problems on "certified" airframes maintained by trained and "certified" people. That something like something like this can be built into an aircraft and go unnoticed and/or uncorrected on a homebuilt, possibly built by someone with no aviation maintenance experience or systems knowledge and maintained and inspected by that same builder... well... I expect it when there is personal freedom to do what you want without any real oversight.
I help people who ask to the best of my ability. I don't know everything, in fact, I know a lot less than I have yet to learn and just because I could pass a couple of tests many years ago isn't proof I am a good mech. I do not hire out to work on homebuilts because of things I have seen.
added edit: This isn't meant to imply all amateur built aircraft have severe flaws. Just pointing out that they are amateur built and some people are inclined to do only the minimum required to make something work. "Right" or "wrong" doesn't enter into it but sometimes "scary" does.