Mackrick wrote:You don't want this happening do you ....
http://forum.keypublishing.com/showpost.php?p=1513931&postcount=1
We certainly don't, which is why we keep the CofG well forward.
However, the amount of snow we found today was enough to cause concern, so we set about removing it.

Picture credit:- Charles Brimson
It was about four hours work for four of us, with frequent coffee breaks to warm up. We removed all the snow from the wing surfaces aft of the main undercarriage. The area forward of the gear was left snow-covered, to push the CofG even further forward and hopefully help combat the effect of any further significant snowfalls.
Amanda_h wrote:Back to 655 is the idea to drop the engine and get it undercover
to examine it?
Presumably the engine bay can still be closed and locked without the engine in.
It seems a bit of a tall order to remove the engine examine it and get it back in
all in one day.
Once the engine is out, the engine bay doors can be put back on and the aircraft made secure. The dismantling, inspection, any necessary rectification and then re-assembly will take some time.
Hope that the guys at NEAM can sort out their problems, and that the damage is not too serious.























