Jonathan Baron
New member
I went about acquiring my Cruisemaster is the worst of wrong ways, and it has cost me. First off it had sat for five years. Its previous owner had his own way of doing things. The mechanic I paid to annual it got busted for running a meth lab upstairs in his hangar. The power pack sort of worked, but it was beyond repair. The hydraulic pump was also beyond repair but it worked well enough, as did the power pack, to get me home (Russell did the flying).
Despite what the owner and Santa Monica Propeller said, the prop did not comply with an important AD regarding the clamps. Dan Torrey's borescoped the cylinders and gave it a passing pre-purchase inspection grade. However, and I doubt Dan could have known this, the engine was a rust bucket and ECI rejected most of my original cylinders for a rebuild. The oil thermostat kept the oil temp at 150 degrees - too low to burn off the water, and water was continuously (as I previously reported) fed to the crankcase by what seems to have been a homebrew air oil separator.
The airplane has an orphan engine. Thus acquiring parts to fix things was an unpleasant adventure.
Add that to the expensive series of repairs to assorted elements such as flaps, counter weights, the control system, cables rubbing against the wrong things and so forth and this quickly became an 80k + aircraft.
I'm not whining here. I love the airplane. However I believe that if we all share our stories of our first year or two of ownership it can be a BIG help to those shopping for a Bellanca 14 series aircraft. Good tales and sad ones - both are helpful. Some things, such as the mechanic with the meth lab, are not foreseeable troubles....or are they?
Step right up, one and all, and share your hard won wisdom
Jonathan
Despite what the owner and Santa Monica Propeller said, the prop did not comply with an important AD regarding the clamps. Dan Torrey's borescoped the cylinders and gave it a passing pre-purchase inspection grade. However, and I doubt Dan could have known this, the engine was a rust bucket and ECI rejected most of my original cylinders for a rebuild. The oil thermostat kept the oil temp at 150 degrees - too low to burn off the water, and water was continuously (as I previously reported) fed to the crankcase by what seems to have been a homebrew air oil separator.
The airplane has an orphan engine. Thus acquiring parts to fix things was an unpleasant adventure.
Add that to the expensive series of repairs to assorted elements such as flaps, counter weights, the control system, cables rubbing against the wrong things and so forth and this quickly became an 80k + aircraft.
I'm not whining here. I love the airplane. However I believe that if we all share our stories of our first year or two of ownership it can be a BIG help to those shopping for a Bellanca 14 series aircraft. Good tales and sad ones - both are helpful. Some things, such as the mechanic with the meth lab, are not foreseeable troubles....or are they?
Step right up, one and all, and share your hard won wisdom

Jonathan