The discussion section of AD 2008-24-07 confirms the information that Eclipse
500 owners have received directly from the aircraft manufacturer and the engine
manufacturer, namely:
"When the PW610F-A engine is operated above 37,000 feet, for over an hour,
AND WITH HIGH BLEED FLOW, hard carbon forms due to high local fuel air ratio
near the combustor wall." (emphasis added)
There is no need to restrict flight to 37,000 feet and below. According to the AD
itself, a necessary prerequisite for the unsafe condition is high bleed flow.
Therefore, not operating the aircraft above 37,000 feet with high bleed flow is all
that is required to address the unsafe condition.
Setting the cabin and cockpit desired environmental temperatures to 68F keeps
these engines from going into high bleed flow and prevents the unsafe condition
that the AD addresses. Therefore, a limitation regarding temperature
setting above 37,000 feet would be equally-effective and far less restrictive than
the one actually proposed in the AD.
Kenneth Meyer
This is comment on Rule
Airworthiness Directives: Eclipse Aviation Corporation Model EA500 Airplanes
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