fastj22 wrote:Help me out here, how does the FAA know which prop my plane is supposed to have?
fastj22 wrote:Help me out here, how does the FAA know which prop my plane is supposed to have? ... How does one specify it if they built the prop themselves?
Sonerai13 wrote:fastj22 wrote:Help me out here, how does the FAA know which prop my plane is supposed to have?
The propeller is listed on the Application for Airworthiness Certificate (FAA Form 8130-6, block 1, items 9 and 10). I went through a bunch of back and forth with the FAA a few years ago concerning airplanes that were being raced at Reno. The racers are always looking for the "edge" and change props frequently. But many of them didn't have the proper records to record the changes. This is not something that would be caught on a "ramp check" necessarily, but if the FAA ever decided to look at your airplane in detail, it's one more thing they can try to find that's not right. So if you change props without following the proper procedure, you do so at your own peril.
FAA at the HQ level told me that any propeller change other than a direct replacement of the exact same make/model is considered a "major change". FSDO inspectors in the field don't always see it that way. So if your FSDO tells you it's not, get that response in writing so you can prove that you checked.
Johns wrote:Hi guys, just got off the phone with the fsdo and he told me the prop change had to be done by A+P seeing I don't have a repairman certificate. I didn't think this was the case. Thought I could do it myself. what do you think?
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