I'd put a few boxes on the right seat sometimes. Best FO I ever had.I'm not aware of any specific guidance on not putting cargo somewhere. We'll, except for your lap. That would be frowned upon, but even then, I don't think it's in writing that you can't.
I don't/didn't fly the Chieftain or 1900 though.
I'd put a few boxes on the right seat sometimes. Best FO I ever had.
Had one next to my stuff in the metro once. A 1lb box was the only cargo I had to pick up. Was a part for an Atlas 747.I'd put a few boxes on the right seat sometimes. Best FO I ever had.
Yup. The permission is more for letting someone else know the cargo is in the wing lockers rather than safety issues.Gotcha the rain part makes sense.
I usually tell the UPS driver to wait until I I verify that no more cargo is in the wing lockers or nose before he or she departs to decrease the occurrence of forgetting cargo at my operator. I was more curious since I was talking to a current AMF pilot about it. A lot of my loads are so heavy/bulky/big boxes that I have to utilize all available space.
Thanks for answering.
Yeah, I'm intimately familiar with the nose door. It's just something you have to check every time before you hop in the plane. If the pilot does close it and it pops open though, either the pilot or the mechanics are functionally retarded. It's really a quite robust system if you don't circumvent the safety features like people were doing before the AD was issued.The nose in the chieftain was discouraged because it was basically the nose door of death if you didn't lock it properly. But, obviously you are not going to bump cargo to avoid using those bays. Just use them only when necessary.
I'd put a few boxes on the right seat sometimes. Best FO I ever had.
As long as they are secured and accounted for in W&B. It's not different than my flight kit or a suitcase or anything else that has weight.That isn't legal as far as I can remember.
Here's an apples to apples comparison.... If someone works hard and does't mind taking any base available, here is a sample pay scale (YMMV)
Old Pay
Year 1,BE99, $28,000
Year 2, BE1900, $44,822 (with bonus)
Year 3, BE-1900, $45,165 (with bonus)
Year 4, EMB-120, 53,082 (with bonus)
.
Three year compensation = $171,069
.
.
New Pay
Year 1, BE99, $34,000
Year 2, BE1900, $50,050
Year 3, BE1900, $51,150
Year 4, EMB-120, $60,500
.
Three year compensation = $195,700
Thus, after 4 years, the total pay raise is 14.5%