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Stolen Avionics: An Old Reality

I’d say the trip is off to a bad start when you pull the cover off the airplane and slide into the cabin only to find holes in the panel and a bunch of empty mounting racks in the radio stack. After a few seconds the sickening reality sinks in: Somebody lifted your high-priced avionics. That’s a tale of woe from a Mooney owner at a big-city airport, and I’ve talked to plenty others who lost avionics and portable gadgets in otherwise sleepy backwoods airfields. This is hardly a new problem. Thieves have targeted aircraft electronics for as long as I can remember.

In fact when I was a green avionics guy in the late 1980s the problem was so widespread that every radio we pulled from a stack was checked against the serial numbers logged in the maintenance records, and also against a stolen avionics database. In those days the flagship radio—and a hot number on the black market—was the King KX170B navcomm. These old radios have a thin tin data identification tag affixed (essentially glued) to the rear chassis. It wasn’t uncommon to pull the radios and find that someone switched the tags, a shell game that made it impossible to keep track of which radio belonged to a given aircraft. Some radios had no tags at all, technically making them unairworthy per published specs. These days the hot numbers are Garmin GNS and GTN navigators.

Larry Anglisano

Editor in Chief Larry Anglisano has been a staple at Aviation Consumer since 1995. An active land, sea and glider pilot, Larry has over 30 years’ experience as an avionics repairman and flight test pilot. He’s the editorial director overseeing sister publications Aviation Safety magazine, IFR magazine and is a regular contributor to KITPLANES magazine with his Avionics Bootcamp column.