Uh, Doug, I know you've seen this before...
CAUTION: Flight crew reset of a tripped circuit breaker in flight is not
recommended unless specifically directed to do so in a
non-normal checklist.
Kevin
Who said anything about resetting a tripped CB?
.
Read the whole thing...
Flight crew cycling (pulling and resetting) of circuit breakers to clear non-normal conditions is not
recommended unless directed by a non-normal checklist.
Kevin
You'd be pulling the CB to make the lav motor stop running, and resetting it to make the motor run again.
There would be no expectation of "clearing" a non-normal condition.
Exactly why you should call maintenance...
Kevin
I happen to believe that a working lav is a basic and expected necessity for paying passengers. Have ops call contract maintenance and get it fixed. No voting and no discussions. If a creative crew wants to try resetting a breaker or jiggling a handle - go for it. If that doesn't work, get it fixed right and then continue on your way. The pressure to go by others should have no bearing on a prudent and sound decision by the captain. There are no committees or democracies on my airplane.
My dad knew this guy, and talked to him about it. What he told him is exactly what should have been done. There is NO need to divert. Instead of wasting thousands and thousands of dollars, let the woman #### in the toilet and just don't flush it. When you land in MCI, have somebody clean it out. Sure it won't be fun, but why cause such a big delay and waste so much money just to avoid having a turd sitting in the john for half the flight?
two words, "Hanging chads!":rawk:Oh come on - now I know you're making it up. Anything as important as an engine fire HAS to be a paper ballot - you can't make critical flight decisions like that on a voice vote......![]()
You have just completed boarding on the aircraft, and are finishing the last minute paperwork before departing on a red-eye flight. All passengers are on board, and the aircraft is full. While finishing initializing the FMS, a passenger comes up to the flight attendant and says that the only lavatory on board is "continuously flushing." You go back to check, and it is in fact running non-stop.
You are at an outstation, and it's five minutes to departure time. The flight will be about two and a half hours takeoff to touchdown, and contract maintenance will take a while to come out and just look at the problem, if they can even fix it. You can MEL the lavatory, but that means no toilet for the whole flight. While you are thinking, the gate agent keeps reminding you that half the aircraft is connecting to an international destination without a second flight for the day.
What do you do?
Why is cycling a breaker very dangerous?
I'm talking about pulling the breaker then pushing it back in, not holding it in after it blew. Hence, "cycling". The only negative for this I can think of is prematurely wearing the breaker out.