I have read that in "general aviation", the majority of engine problems occur within 50 to 100 hours of a significant overhaul. One could ask "what kind of overhaul increases the chance of an engine problem?", and I am told that the answer is "most of them".
The story seems to be that whenever you mess with an engine that has been running, there is a chance of fouling something up. And unless there are two people working and cross-checking, mess-ups may easily go undetected until the aircraft is flying.
A "poor safety culture" would tend toward things being left undone, and mess-ups being undetected, lack of testing, etc. And maybe the boss-man (presumably an A&P with inspection cert) instructing the mechanic to not do something, omit a check, etc.
BTW, the lnk to the FAA report is to Scribd, which requires you to sign up with them to see anything.
The story seems to be that whenever you mess with an engine that has been running, there is a chance of fouling something up. And unless there are two people working and cross-checking, mess-ups may easily go undetected until the aircraft is flying.
A "poor safety culture" would tend toward things being left undone, and mess-ups being undetected, lack of testing, etc. And maybe the boss-man (presumably an A&P with inspection cert) instructing the mechanic to not do something, omit a check, etc.
BTW, the lnk to the FAA report is to Scribd, which requires you to sign up with them to see anything.
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