
The damage was relatively minor. I removed less than a 1/8 of an inch from the tip of both propeller blades. It has been overhauled and repaired.
My problem is with the teardown inspection of the engine. The insurance company is refusing to pay for the inspection related to AD 94-05-05. To do the prop strike inspection on the engine the cylinders have to be removed. To reinstall the cylinders they have to be inspected according to AD 94-05-05. The insurance company adjuster says the AD is not related to the prop strike so they don't have to pay for it. I can't put the engine back together without doing the AD inspection so I say it is related. I would not be required to do the AD inspection if it were not for the prop strike requiring the engine to be dismantled.
In my insurance binder states;
"What we will pay
Damaged Aircraft,
If your aircraft is damaged and not destroyed, we will pay the reasonable cost of repair."
There is no specified definition of "reasonable cost of repair' in the binder, nor is there an exclusion for AD inspections.
What do you guys think? I do not expect the insurance to pay for anything found when doing the AD inspection, But if there is nothing wrong I expect the insurance company to put my engine back together without having to pay more than my deductible. I have been quoted an additional $1900 to do the AD inspection and to hone the cylinders and install new rings. My engine shop says its standard procedure to hone the cylinders and replace the rings when they have been removed. Would you say this is true?
Thanks,
Ken