PFF
Computer
- Oct 27, 2004
- 23
If you are not aware the FAA has issued a sweeping airworthiness directive that requires the retirement of all R22 main rotor blades on or before thier tenth birthday. Normally, it is fatigue cycles or time in service that determines retirement. This directive is very suspicious. I've researched the circumstances that prompted this action and sadly cannot find any science to back it up. My question to the group is have any of you heard of such a thing before?
Until now R22 main rotor blades had a usefull life of 2200 hours time in service. To date there has never been a main rotor blade failure in the US. There's been three failures in Australia where the ships are used for cattle mustering. All the evidence shows these failed blade had between 3000 and 6000 hours of use when they failed. Nontheless, the FAA now claims it is the age of the blades not the time in service the caused these accidents. In my research I discovered the following:
First blade failure the age was two years old.
second failure the age was 4 years old.
third failure the age was 9 years old (the FAA says this last blade was 12 years old but Robinson told me differently when I gave them the serial number and they gave me the date of manufacture).
Anyway, the last blade was used as proof that the age of the blade is the problem and then issued this directive. What I'd like to know is if anyone has any idea what the truth is here? If it is the age that caused these failures HOW? I see no connections what so ever. Any help analyzing this would be greatly appreciated. Thanks.
Until now R22 main rotor blades had a usefull life of 2200 hours time in service. To date there has never been a main rotor blade failure in the US. There's been three failures in Australia where the ships are used for cattle mustering. All the evidence shows these failed blade had between 3000 and 6000 hours of use when they failed. Nontheless, the FAA now claims it is the age of the blades not the time in service the caused these accidents. In my research I discovered the following:
First blade failure the age was two years old.
second failure the age was 4 years old.
third failure the age was 9 years old (the FAA says this last blade was 12 years old but Robinson told me differently when I gave them the serial number and they gave me the date of manufacture).
Anyway, the last blade was used as proof that the age of the blade is the problem and then issued this directive. What I'd like to know is if anyone has any idea what the truth is here? If it is the age that caused these failures HOW? I see no connections what so ever. Any help analyzing this would be greatly appreciated. Thanks.