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You are looking at the perfect airplane. It has a glass cockpit, racing seats, and LED landing lights. It looks like a modern machine. But the moment you try to sell it, you discover the truth: You own a $100,000 lawn ornament. In aviation, gravity isn't the only thing that grounds you—ink does. You might have paid cash for that plane, but if the logbooks don't match the dashboard, the FAA says you don't own an aircraft; you own a collection of unapproved parts flying in close formation. In this video, we hunt down "Zombie Modifications"—upgrades installed decades ago by mechanics who thought "it’ll be fine." We expose the "Amazon LED" trap, the danger of automotive parts hiding in aircraft engines, and the missing Form 337s that turn a simple sale into a federal investigation. In this video: 🔦 The Amazon Trap: Why that $40 LED landing light renders your aircraft unairworthy. 🚗 The Auto-Part Lie: Identifying "Car Parts" (Alternators/Starters) that invalidate your Type Certificate. 📝 The Missing 337: Why a missing piece of paper costs more to fix than the part itself. ⚖️ The Ghost Weight: How "Math Errors" in your Weight & Balance can legally ground you even if the plane flies perfectly. 👇 The Verdict: Is your plane actually legal, or just "lucky"? Go check your logbooks. Do you have the STC for that upgrade? Tell us what you find in the comments below. Copyright Fair Use Disclaimer: The material presented in this video is not exclusively owned by us. It belongs to individuals or organizations that we deeply respect. Its use follows the guidelines of Section 107 of the Copyright Act of 1976, which permits "fair use" for purposes such as criticism, commentary, news reporting, teaching, academic research, and study.