
It’s a sad state of affairs when it’s far easier
for older pilots to have new knees installed in their vintage bodies
than to have new fuel valves installed in their vintage airplanes.
It’s, however, becoming an unfortunate reality, as the general
aviation fleet grows progressively older and accessing “approved data”
becomes more difficult. But now a glimmer of hope is on the horizon
for those owners who wish to safely and legally maintain and upgrade
their antique, classic and vintage airplanes.
Before looking at the possible solution, it’s useful to take a closer
look at the situation. According to the FAA, the average age of the
American general aviation fleet in 2000 was 30 years old. By 2020, the
average age will likely be 50. As it is, many of those airplanes no
longer have the active support of their original manufacturers, and
that’s a problem with little hope of improvement.
In fact, many companies that once worked so hard to gain type
certificates for these planes have long since gone out of business.
Fearful of liability problems, some of the companies still in business
are reluctant to provide the data. Based on the advice of government
lawyers, the FAA has also decided that it will not release the
approved data it holds, which only adds to the problem. Yet, at the
same time, it requires owners and mechanics to use approved data for
the maintenance, repair and restoration of older aircraft. This is the
classic Catch-22 now facing owners of vintage airplanes.
Ironically, owners of aging aircraft have compounded the problem by
doing a great job of maintaining their airplanes. Through diligent
upkeep, the support of type clubs, and field approvals to install
modern, improved parts, owners have played a significant role in
extending the lives of airplanes that weren’t designed to fly after
50, 60 or even 70 years.
But, as careful as most owners have been in assuring that their planes
are airworthy, over the past few years, several high-profile accidents
have brought increased scrutiny to what is now termed the
“aging-aircraft” issue. Vintage-aircraft owners cry foul when the FAA
points to a wing-separation accident involving a T-34 long used in
simulated combat training to justify its increased attention to the
entire T-34 fleet, and especially when that reasoning is extended to
all older airplanes. Airplane owners point out that the vast majority
of vintage airplanes are not now, nor have they ever been, subject to
such stresses.
Owners say they simply want fair treatment, the assurance that
egregious cases won’t be used as the basis for future rules, and a
common-sense approach to repairing and maintaining older airplanes in
the absence of “approved data.” Now, thanks to the aggressive advocacy
of the EAA and its companion group, the Vintage Aircraft Association (VAA),
a possible solution to the problem has been proposed.
For several years, the EAA and VAA have been petitioning the FAA for a
method through which owners can get approved data, but with little or
no success. The problem seemed intractable until the two organizations
decided to try a radical new approach. Instead of trying to get data,
they’ve proposed a new vintage aircraft certification category, which
would eliminate the approved-data issue, and allow owners to work with
their mechanics, using “accepted data” and practices (FAR
Part 43).
Simply put, under the proposal presented to the FAA in March, owners
could voluntarily remove their airplane from its current type
certificate, and transfer it into the new certification category. It’s
important to repeat a key word in that last sentence, and that’s the
word “voluntarily.”
Earl Lawrence, the EAA’s vice president of industry and regulatory
affairs, is one of the principal authors of the proposal, and from the
beginning, he says he was well aware that aircraft owners wouldn’t
take kindly to any new, mandatory solution. Beyond that, the EAA
wanted to make it clear that this was the beginning of the process. Of
the proposal and the reaction to it, Lawrence says, “It’s developing
the debate that we wanted to get going. Some people have felt that we
already wrote a rule and handed it to the FAA. But what we have done
is present a proposal to get a discussion going because we wanted to
address how we can keep these aircraft flying.”
The EAA summarizes their proposal this way: “Create a certification
category that will give owners and their mechanics the ability to
maintain vintage aircraft using safety-based form, fit and function
criteria, as opposed to unavailable or outdated type-certificate
data.”
The proposal will allow an owner of record to choose whether or not to
place an airplane into the new vintage category, a choice that
wouldn’t be reversible. The transfer into the vintage category would
also mean the airplane couldn’t be used for hire. Except for owners
who use older aircraft for commercial purposes such as ride hopping or
flight exhibition, this would be a small price to pay for the proposed
benefits.
To understand how voluntarily moving an airplane into the new category
could be beneficial, it’s helpful to look at a real-world comparison
between what’s being proposed, and what currently exists. Under
current rules, an owner who wishes to install a part that’s not within
the original type certificate, or has been approved under a
supplemental type certificate (STC), must petition the FAA for a field
approval. This is often an expensive and time-consuming process, made
worse if the manufacturer of the part hasn’t sought approval from the
Parts Manufacturing Authority (PMA). Under the proposal, if the
owner’s mechanic is satisfied that the part meets the requirements of
FAR Part 43 for “safety-based form, fit and function,” the
part can be installed and a simple logbook entry made. Depending on
the final form the proposal may take, it’s possible that the FAA may
need to be notified that the work was performed, but no approval will
be required.
Among the type club representatives in attendance at the March
meeting, initial reactions to the proposal appeared to be favorable.
Gary Rankin is president of the American Navion Society, a group
representing many of the owners of the nearly 1,000 Navions still
flying. He says, “I came away feeling very optimistic that this
proposal offers a long-term solution for those of us who fly older
aircraft and want to upgrade and maintain them safely.”
Butch Joyce is the operations manager for AUA Insurance, a North
Carolina-based agency long known for writing coverage for vintage
aircraft, and is himself the owner of a vintage airplane. Stressing
that he was speaking as an aircraft owner, and not officially for his
company or its underwriters, Joyce asserts, “My personal opinion of
the proposal as it was presented is that I don’t see a problem with it
as an insurance issue. That’s because the airplanes would be
maintained as they are now, and I think it would be an improvement
since we’d have more current data.”
No one expects the FAA to take immediate action on the proposal—with
the most optimistic hope for approval and implementation within two to
three years. But in a hopeful sign, the EAA’s Lawrence noted that at
the conclusion of the March meeting, working groups were established
and immediately began the task of studying five key aging-aircraft
subject areas, a process that will include serious discussions on the
future of a new vintage-aircraft certification category. The groups
were planning to reconvene as early as July’s AirVenture in a public
forum for a review of their work.
In the meantime, as their airplanes age, vintage-aircraft owners must
continue to work within the constraints of a lack of approved
documentation, and of contradictory regulations requiring such
documentation. For the long term though, optimists such as Earl
Lawrence see a real possibility that a unified general aviation
community of owners, type clubs and industry leaders can convince the
FAA that the proposal will improve safety, guaranteeing its success.
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