Aborted Take Off

BravoHotel

Well-Known Member
I am just probably ranting, but I thought I would write it here anyways.

Today the winds in south Nevada were pretty strong. I was able to get my first load of skydivers up with out too much of a hitch. Load number 2, I am on my take off roll, pretty gnarly cross wind, I have both left aileron and rudder in this thing and I am still drifting right so I killed it, exited and told my skydivers I was going to give it another go, they weren't keen on it, so we called it a day, because they have to land in this crap with parachutes....Fast forward

The boss man is getting on my case because I aborted my take off. I told him the conditions, and he wasn't having it. He gave me a lecture on how we need the revenue etc...I told him, at that point screw the revenue, my decision was based on safety concerns. Better to scream about a few bucks then have an incident or accident...

This is not the only time I recieved a truck load of crap for making a decision like this. I do not need to start second guessing my self.

Is this the crap you deal with while you are building flight time?

One of our jump masters told me I am getting schooled on cross wind take offs and landings tomorrow. I'd better bite my tounge or else...
 
Is this the crap you deal with while you are building flight time?
Hell, I deal with that kind of crap on a regular basis. Like "why didn't you just top off and do it non-stop?" or "why did you divert with the weather -1/4 and VV001?" or my personal favorite "why did you cruise at FL320 instead of FL400 on that 300 mile flight?".

I bite my tongue and do the right thing. Keeps me legal, keeps me safe, job be damned.

-mini
 
Wasn't it the skydivers' decision to not go up after you offered to try again? Bossman's complaint is with them, not you.
 
Seems the lower time you have the more likely you are to deal with BS like this, exactly when you need it least. I had one flight school that wanted me to keep flying a plane that constantly redlined the oil temp, but they refused to fix. I just told my students not to book that plane any more. Not a great way to inspire confidence in the flight school, but then that was their choice.
 
Just remember, in the eyes of most managers, you are expendable. Ohh, that and getting this one flight out matters more than anything else in the whole wide world, ron. So far, I've been lucky, and have worked as PIC for two pretty good places.
 
Wasn't it the skydivers' decision to not go up after you offered to try again? Bossman's complaint is with them, not you.

I concur with Mike, H; your boss made a bad call on this one.

For all we know, you might of made a successful second-attempt on take-off, made it up to altitude, and your skydivers might of still called it off due to winds, costing your boss even more money for the fuel expended, etc.

Hope you ain't losing any sleep over this.
 
I did a low speed abort today (<80 knots) for a stuck bleed valve. Boss man is bitching up a storm. Sorry, but I don't want the engine to esplode because I didn't want to do an abort cruising through 70 knots on an 8,000' runway.

Don't like it? Find someone else to fly.

*Ran the checklist and it was fine after that*

-mini
 
I did a low speed abort today (<80 knots) for a stuck bleed valve. Boss man is bitching up a storm. Sorry, but I don't want the engine to esplode because I didn't want to do an abort cruising through 70 knots on an 8,000' runway.

Don't like it? Find someone else to fly.

*Ran the checklist and it was fine after that*

-mini
Good thing you never flew the 35s at Airnet.
 
I swear thats why the 1900 was never allowed to depart with bleeds on. They wanted us flying before we discovered a problem...

And so what.. the take off wasn't safe.. Why push it? stop and wait for the wind to sort out a bit
 
Burnt ankles.
Ah no this wasn't just an uncomfy cabin. ...we talked to a crew in BFE alabama that had that happen. By the time they got it turned around and back to the field, the pax had their shirts off and were playing Poker.

Apparently our wing A/I valve stuck open, sucking the air away from the engines and causing our "HEY LOOK" ITT light to flash red at me...so we stopped rather than cook the engine. At least that's the diagnosis I gave it after running the checklist and consulting with mx. They concur.

The boss said we should have just retarded the left throttle and continued.

...at 70 knots. Way below V1.

.........yeah.

I wish I was joking.

-mini
 
I think that you should record your conversations with your boss to provide a legal discussion for yourself if you get fired. If that doesn't work keep a written book of your discussions with your employer.

Lawyers like to see a history of bad things happening.

Just my 2 pennies.
 
I think that you should record your conversations with your boss to provide a legal discussion for yourself if you get fired. If that doesn't work keep a written book of your discussions with your employer.

Lawyers like to see a history of bad things happening.

Just my 2 pennies.

I like that, I keeping having run ins. Some just petty crap, but some are bigger in nature. I'll go buy a book tomorrow. It would also be a good idea to keep track of other things around the job, like ancillary stuff I do for extra cash, like pack chutes and do video edits.
 
I think that you should record your conversations with your boss to provide a legal discussion for yourself if you get fired. If that doesn't work keep a written book of your discussions with your employer.

Lawyers like to see a history of bad things happening.

Just my 2 pennies.
Normally he sends these wonderful ideas via text message to my phone or via email to my blackberry................which are forwarded to my own personal email address for safe keeping.

The certificate holder, OTOH....they put NOTHING in writing. Smart. Very smart.

Down side is he can't really "Fire" me since I'm a "contractor"...but yes, I see your point and I've definitely been doing that for a while now.:)

It's a shame the owners of the plane don't understand what a smoking hole looks like......until he becomes one. I just worry about who he's going to take with him.

Thank God 1) I'm willing for him to "fire" me for saying "no" and 2) the pay is "better 'n average".

-mini
 
"Hey Farva, what is that restaurant with all the goofy on the walls you like to go to?" "Shenanigans?"

shenanigans.png
 
It would also be a good idea to keep track of other things around the job, like ancillary stuff I do for extra cash, like pack chutes and do video edits.

Hopefully you have a parachute rigger certificate if you are repacking parachutes.

Typically if the winds are too strong for the pilot, they are way too strong for the skydiver. However, leaning towards the side of safety in decision making is one of the keys to having a long and happy life.
 
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