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An Aircraft Buyer s Secret Weapon


by: Av8rdan
status: Newbie
Total views: 14
Word Count: 509

If you are in the market to purchase your own airplane, I have a valuable tip for you.

This year, I went about the task of finding a 1964 Piper Cherokee 235 that will serve me well in my business and family flying, But there is one thing that keeps popping up with airplanes built before the Summer of Love: Damage history.

As I browse the daily listings on sites like Trade-a-Plane and Controller, the one thing that always generates a second look are those magical three letters...NDH, for No Damage History. It is one of the two most desirable attributes on an older model plane, right up there with "complete logs"..

But when does "no damage history" really mean NO damage history? I have had a couple of recent surprises when a listing said NDH, but a quick search on Google brought up an NTSB report showing a crash with "substantial" damage. On one of these occasions, I let the owner off the hook after he told me NDH and I found a 1967 crash because nothing about the accident was listed in the logs.

Now I'm using a secret weapon that all airplane buyers should know about...the FAA database. For a crisp ten spot and a few clicks of your mouse at registry.faa.gov, you can search the database in various ways and when you find the aircraft's records, you can order a CD that contains every piece of FAA paperwork ever generated on a particular aircraft. Just plug in the registration or "N" number, wait about 10 days, and your disk arrives with more 411 then you ever thought was out there about any flying machine ever registered with FAA.

On the disk will be two PDF documents, made from the microfilm archived at FAA. One PDF will show every shred of registration info, including all change of ownership forms as well as some mortgage and loan paperwork. This is a great tool to follow the lineage of the plane right back to day one. One disk I recently ordered showed close to 20 owners for a 1964 model 235, far too many for my blood. Multiple owners had resold the plane just a few months after buying it...an indicator of a possible dog. But the other half of the CD is where the really juicy stuff can be found.

The second PDF shows all FAA "337" forms that have been submitted on the plane. You'll quickly scroll through every major repair or alteration, and get a glimpse into the past life of the plane. Want to know what year the ADF was junked...it's in there. That hangar rash suffered back on '72 when Bubba bounced his pick-up truck off the wingtip...it's in there.

When you buy your own airplane, there are always plenty of negotiations between buyer and seller. But at least with the FAA disk as ammunition, you'll go into the negotiations armed and ready for a little back and forth as you work towards the right price.

BlueWaterArticles.com: - An Aircraft Buyer s Secret Weapon


About the Author

Author and private pilot Dan Pimentel owns a aviation advertising agency in Oregon and has been an aviation writer since 1980. He frequently writes about interesting general aviation topics at his blog, World of Flying. You can order these CDs from the FAA at this web site.


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