Blackhawk
Well-Known Member
That is when you say you have a pressing engagement and don't have time for your silly ramp check.
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... and face the certification action that is sure to follow.
That is when you say you have a pressing engagement and don't have time for your silly ramp check.
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Okay, there was an example in last month's EAA magazine.
Pilot has flat tire, Part 91. Pilot changes tire. Pilots makes entry in log. Is the aircraft airworthy? Yes.
Pilot has flat tire, Part 91. Pilot goes to A&P. A&P changes tire and notes brake disc .0001 out of spec. Is the aircraft airworthy? No.
The pilot can only determine that the aircraft is airworthy based upon: an airworthiness certificate, current annual, MX logs, and AD compliance. The pilot can determine if it is in a condition safe for flight by doing a preflight. What do you expect? The PIC should do an annual inspection before every flight?
And I can't find any FAR granting a pilot the authority to determine airworthiness.
PIC is only responsible for determining that the aircraft is "safe for flight." - per part 91.
The aircraft also can't be flown if it is not airworthy, but it would take an A&P to determine that. This is, after all, why we have 100 hours and annuals.
You as a pilot always have authority to determine that something is unairworthy. To use an extreme example, if you walk up to an airplane and half of a propeller blade is missing, you're going to say "That's unairworthy." right?
Anyone performing maintenance must perform it to acceptable standards, be that a pilot or a mechanic.
"Section 91.7(a) prohibits operation of unairworthy aircraft. Sections 135.65(b) and (c), as pertinent here, require the pilot in command to enter or have entered in the aircraft maintenance log all mechanical irregularities that come to his attention during flight, and require each person deferring action concerning an observed failure or malfunction to record that action in the maintenance log."
Good lord, what kind of fed carries around a micrometer and measures brake discs on the ramp?
I would say "that may not be in a safe condition for flight!"
Yeah, but that's not what CFR14 Part 43.3 says. A private pilot owner or co-owner may only perform the specific maintenance or inspections listed in Appendix (a)(4), which does not include brakes or hydraulics. And by 43.7, I can't determine airworthiness or return it to service if it involved those systems (since I wasn't performing mx on them).
Either way, if you know the brake rotor to be unserviceable you may not install it... you have to get a serviceable one, but now you have to get an A&P to sign it off. I guess that's probably motivation for not measuring it in the first place, now that I think about it![]()
That's how I changed the last tire. Damn, that micrometer is easy to misplace!
If I fly our pax jet, and I get a 709 ride because there is a frayed seatbelt out of the 500 on board in the cabin, there will be a fist fight.
Yes, but it doesn't say that. It says says that the PIC is responsible for determining whether the aircraft is safe for flight. Not the same as determining whether it is airworthy.
Since, at this point, the thread has devolved to the point of just making stupid arguments I'll leave it at this:
If I fly our pax jet, and I get a 709 ride because there is a frayed seatbelt out of the 500 on board in the cabin, there will be a fist fight.
Since, at this point, the thread has devolved to the point of just making stupid arguments I'll leave it at this:
If I fly our pax jet, and I get a 709 ride because there is a frayed seatbelt out of the 500 on board in the cabin, there will be a fist fight.
Not unsafe, unairworthy. Of note in this case, the mechanic told the pilot that he would be legal to fly the airplane but it did not matter- the pilot was expected to know that inoperative carb heat made the airplane unairworthy.
I think we all agree that 91.7 does not allow an unairworthy aircraft to be flown.
My question is, where is the limit to that? I sqawk the carb heat, mechanic signs it off as repaired, airworthy, returned to service, tells me it is fine, it doesn't work - then what? Violation for the pilot?
For what it is worth, how many times have you had something broken, had the A/C returned to service not believing it was actually fixed, and it turned out not to be fixed. Should a pilot under that scenario be violated?
Like everyone else, you seem to be losing touch of the issue.
The issue isn't the legality or illegality of the plane. We all know if you poke around on any plane long enough, you'll be able to find it out of compliance with the regs. I'll never advocate knowingly taking up an illegal airplane. The issue is a technical violation (such as the TSO tag missing from a seatbelt - should I, as an ATP-rated passenger on a 121 airliner, report each time the TSO tag is missing or the seatbelt is installed backward to a FA? Of course not) vs. an unairworthy item, but in a subject area of a mechanic's knowledge and probably not a pilot's vs. a grievous violation.
Now, there is no need to dig around on google and quote all kinds of stuff. I'm quite familiar with how the FAA works and how violations are actually issued. I also have plenty of time working with the FAA when issues of varying degrees have been addressed. So, there is, in fact, a practical working side to the academic side. I know that the lack of black-and-white clarity and the application of reason and common sense doesn't bode well with the satire that is innerweb discussions, but that's how it works.
The issue is a 709 ride for a minor issue. Basicially, what you guys are arguing about is giving a dude the death penalty for a parking violation.