gitmo234
Line Up and Wait
Hey everyone,
During a de-icing and pre-flight adventure today I cleared off about 6-7 inches of snow from the wings of my plane and then de-iced it. I'm in a 1956 C172
After the de-icing I noticed a gap on the right flap when fully up. I could see daylight. The gap was about 1/2 an inch to an inch. I lowered the flaps, and there was a "rough" feeling, which I assumed was due to the snow and ice melting off of it.
Raised them again and they were even rougher. Gap was still there. With some play.
Lowered again to take a look, and when I tried to raise them, it was hard to get them back to fully 0 degrees.
Airport mechanic happened to be in his hanger and I called him over. He popped a panel or two and said that the cable for that flap had come off the pulley and he'll take care of it early in the AM monday if it was a simple pulley up top, but my flaps go down under the floorboards to the johnson bar. If they were off those pulleys as well we're talking a longer time to fix.
My question is: Could this be related to the weight of the snow? Or, as my dad would politely put it "horse assing around" with the flaps before the ice and snow were cleared 100%? I didnt use much force lowering them the first time, but it was also about 15 degrees out.
Thanks
During a de-icing and pre-flight adventure today I cleared off about 6-7 inches of snow from the wings of my plane and then de-iced it. I'm in a 1956 C172
After the de-icing I noticed a gap on the right flap when fully up. I could see daylight. The gap was about 1/2 an inch to an inch. I lowered the flaps, and there was a "rough" feeling, which I assumed was due to the snow and ice melting off of it.
Raised them again and they were even rougher. Gap was still there. With some play.
Lowered again to take a look, and when I tried to raise them, it was hard to get them back to fully 0 degrees.
Airport mechanic happened to be in his hanger and I called him over. He popped a panel or two and said that the cable for that flap had come off the pulley and he'll take care of it early in the AM monday if it was a simple pulley up top, but my flaps go down under the floorboards to the johnson bar. If they were off those pulleys as well we're talking a longer time to fix.
My question is: Could this be related to the weight of the snow? Or, as my dad would politely put it "horse assing around" with the flaps before the ice and snow were cleared 100%? I didnt use much force lowering them the first time, but it was also about 15 degrees out.
Thanks