Inverted
mmmmmm wine
Relevant triva:
The three-engined Falcon has an engine-out take-off procedure.
Not really relevant. Lots of 3 and above engined aircraft have inop engine procedures. This is a 2 engine aircraft.
Relevant triva:
The three-engined Falcon has an engine-out take-off procedure.
Engine out + take-off + bizjets = some relevancy in my mind.Not really relevant. Lots of 3 and above engined aircraft have inop engine procedures. This is a 2 engine aircraft.
Tough audience.Yeah, stupid old man!
DC-10/MD-11 have two engine take off procedure. The 747 has a three engine take off procedure.Relevant triva:
The three-engined Falcon has an engine-out take-off procedure.
DC-10/MD-11 have two engine take off procedure. The 747 has a three engine take off procedure.
...or that you could find somebody to sign the ferry permit. FAA is not afraid to say, fix it where it's at.Just because a manufacturer has a procedure to do something does not mean it is legal under 121/135.
They give ferry permits for about anything. As long as you can reasonably prove it's safe. And even then....or that you could find somebody to sign the ferry permit. FAA is not afraid to say, fix it where it's at.
... and they've gotten in trouble for doing so. FAA safety inspectors aren't above getting their hands slapped. Like giving a ferry permit to an airplane with pitot tube damage. Manafuacter- "You did WHAT????"They give ferry permits for about anything. As long as you can reasonably prove it's safe. And even then.
Last time we got a ferry permit I was thanked for bothering to even get one.
So I was bored in my hotel room tonight, and I was browsing FB. I am friends with an aircraft sales page and they had for sale, an aircraft that I wasn't familiar with. Meet N600RA (now sold):
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She is an Aerospatiale Corvette. Arousing my curiosity, I started reading a bit about the aircraft, I have never seen one before so I was generally curious. Looks like a Falcon 20 had sex with a Lear 35, and given the era of the aircraft, that is probably where how they gathered the design for the Corvette.
Multiple clicks later, I arrive at this:
http://aviation-safety.net/database/record.php?id=19980319-1
So I begin to read, and the bafoonery is strong with this accident. I am assuming that the picture of N600RA posted for sale was in gross error for multiple reasons, but it killed a solid hour in the hotel room which is cool. Very interesting accident, and I think it is the first time of somebody trying to depart with passengers, with only one engine...
Here is the NTSB rundown:
http://www.avweb.com/news/safety/183019-1.html
Here is the actual NTSB report. The pilot had initially lied to investigators, saying that the engine had failed at V1....
http://www.ntsb.gov/about/employmen...ev_id=20001211X09774&ntsbno=SEA98FA047&akey=1
This is actually a shocking report to read. Can anyone shed more light? I was surprised that I didn't see the pilot named in the accident, although I am 3 glasses deep in some Oregon Pinot (ironic right?) so I might have missed it. I would guess that the pilot is no longer flying...
Relevant triva:
The three-engined Falcon has an engine-out take-off procedure.
Ahh, the "ferry".
Sometimes a pilot-in-command needs to put on his big boy pants and be a… pilot in command.
Honeybunches of NOPE: http://flightsafety.org/ap/ap_may96.pdf
Watched an ASA Dash 7 do a "Dreaded Three Engine Takeoff" ferry over to Macon one day. The Delta mainline crew behind them were having a fit over the radio to tower about it.
But it's a procedure listed in the AFM, therefore we are all experts on it.
That ended up being some Cinnamon Toast Crunch AMIRITE?!
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