It was a tense couple of
months for Piper, but all 39 M600 single-engine turboprops that had been
voluntarily grounded by the manufacturer in July have now returned to service
after successfully passing wing-spar inspections, according to a report by
Flight Global.
The FAA issued an
airworthiness directive last month after Piper discovered cracking in the aft
wing spar of a single M600 during final assembly. Piper said it was grounding
the fleet and issuing a service bulletin requiring inspections of all M600 wing
spars out of an “abundance of caution.” Piper blamed the issue on a single
out-of-tolerance part produced by its wing spar supplier.
To ease any concerns M600
owners might have, Piper has extended the manufacturer's warranty for all
wing-structure components from five to seven years, according to the published
report.
The M600, a derivative of the Piper Meridian
featuring an all-new wing, entered service in June 2016.
(Evangle Luo of TTFLY shared with you)
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