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#51
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Isn't amazing how much time seems to exist in those few
moments. And all the details that you see. "Dudley Henriques" wrote in message nk.net... | | "Jim Macklin" wrote in message | news:vfmZf.9862$t22.8921@dukeread08... | That was a long time ago, when the King Air lost its tail. | They did rebuild it, it is probably still flying. That was | back in the days when a Bonanza was about $40,000 and 90 | King Air was about $400,000. | | Lots of things that are legal are not safe, lots of safe | things are not legal and good judgment can be taught by | example. Some people will not learn, some instructor don't | teach, when those two types get together bad things happen. | | We've all seen pilots do stupid tricks and get away with | most of them. I've also seen other things they didn't get | away with, the AeroCommander salesman, demo'd a Turbo 690 | [?] to a university. He wanted to show the customer, not a | pilot, how safe the airplane was. He decided that putting | the gear lever UP while taxiing would be a good idea, to | show that the gear would not retract on the ground. He | didn't could on the struts being over-inflated. The gear | did retract but the plane just settled on the flat belly and | the props did not hit the ground. Actually sold that same | model to the customer. The damage was to the skin and | antennas. | Saw a Tulsa police officer and owner of a nice Citabra taxi | in after a few beers and a short flight at the Tulsa | Downtown Airpark. Everything would have been fine if he'd | stopped before the prop louvered the trunk lid on his car. | One winter, back in the 60s, I saw a Beech 18 mail plane | operated by an outfit called SEMO, land and take-off at SPI | with a 30 knot headwind on a sub-freezing night. They took | off on rwy 30 and used 3,000 feet to get the tail up and | about 4,000 feet to lift off. I don't know how many pounds | over gross the plane was, but I saw them load two trucks of | mail bags and boxes. | Too many CFIs are just trying to earn a living and get the | hours needed for a "real" job, too many students are | interested in the quickest time from first flight to the | license. JFK Jr. should be alive, so should John Denver, so | should Buddy Holly, so should a lot of people. As far as I | know all my students are alive and well. | | | -- | James H. Macklin | ATP,CFI,A&P | | So true! When it's all been said and done, all we can expect to leave with | is the knowledge we did the best we could with what we had to work with. | God only knows I've been given a second chance more than once by something a | lot more powerful than me :-) | I remember one day coming out of a loop as the trailer in a two ship P51 | formation where the lead had taken us in way too fast at the high apex. On | the bottom, he had me pinned between the ground and his airplane. I was | cutting grass at 300 plus and looking up the butt crack of a cow. My prop | probably shaved his antlers a bit as I went over him and with no place to | go, I hollered "give me some room...NOW!!" Lead pitched up to the right and | I went between two buildings in knife edge, standing on the right rudder | with forward stick. Think I had about 4 feet of tip clearance, but I'm | here!!! :-) | Yup...we've ALL had our moments | :-)))))))))))))))))))))))))))))))))))))))))))))))))) ) | Dudley Henriques | | |
#52
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The PIC is responsible for ensuring that the airplane has
the required maintenance entries in the logbook and that the airplane is ready for the flight. The owner is responsible for having the work done and making the entries [making sure that the mechanic properly signs everything off and returns to service.] A student pilot/aircraft owner is expected to know those regulations and maintain the airplane as well as the 10,000 hour plane owner. That was my point. Most students rent airplanes from an FBO and the CFI can, as an employee or the FBO or the FBO as an agent of the CFI, restrict access to a student pilot. If the student pilot owns the airplane, they can fly it when they want and only the students training and the restrictions that are complied with, will restrict the owner/student. -- James H. Macklin ATP,CFI,A&P -- The people think the Constitution protects their rights; But government sees it as an obstacle to be overcome. some support http://www.usdoj.gov/olc/secondamendment2.htm See http://www.fija.org/ more about your rights and duties. "Peter Duniho" wrote in message ... | "Jim Macklin" wrote in message | news:fqmZf.9863$t22.8410@dukeread08... | [...] you as the owner are | legally responsible for making [or having made] all the | required entries in the logbooks for the engine, propeller, | airframe and appliances. | | The FAA has held that the PIC, whether the owner or not, is responsible for | ensuring that the airplane is airworthy (eg, "required entries in the | logbooks for the engine, propeller, airframe and appliances"). | | You're responsible for ADs under | FAR 39 and as the owner, your CFI has less control over what | you do with your airplane. Once you are endorsed for solo, | you can fly whenever you want, whether the CFI approves. | You will need a solo entry in your logbook every 90 days, | but the CFI can not lock up your airplane. [...] | | As long as I'm nitpicking, the CFI has no more or less control over your | airplane when you are the owner. It's the FBO that controls access to the | airplane itself. I admit that this distinction is subtle, and it's true | that an airplane owner doesn't have to deal with the FBO which is always | nice. ![]() airplane out, the | fact that the CFI didn't want that to happen won't matter. | | Pete | | |
#53
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![]() "Jim Macklin" wrote in message news:hBtZf.1$8q.0@dukeread08... Isn't amazing how much time seems to exist in those few moments. And all the details that you see. Yup! In a fraction of a second there, I was doing the mental footwork between the ground, my prop arc (my Hamilton 24D50 cut an 11' 2" swath ), the angular sight distance between my plane and the other Mustang, my wingspan vs the ground if I attempted to bank out of it, the buildings coming right at me at 300 plus, AND that damn cow!! I had almost accepted hitting the cow and trying to put the airplane down somehow between the two buildings as I was yelling at lead to give me some air. It's funny. I've discussed this same "feeling" with friends of mine in NASCAR and Indy Racing. They all say the same thing. In these moments, the mind short circuits and thought based on reason stops cold. Reaction is instinctive and will be right or wrong based on how deeply ingrained your training has taken your mind. I'm far from being qualified to analyze what actually happens to you mentally, but I can tell you this much. To this day, I can sit here in the den typing this post and remember in my mind's eye the exact markings on that cow standing in that field :-)) Dudley Henriques |
#54
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That isn't the issues here. The issue
is instructor judgment. [...] Making a case for allowing a 2 hour student to taxi an airplane unsupervised is something you might want to revisit. Well, all we know about the pilot is that he is a "two hour student", which doesn't say much. The same argument you made could be made for IFR flight - allowing a ten hour student to fly an airplane all by himself, through the air, and a hundred miles an hour, even though he is not ready to fly in instrument conditions. The issue =there= is also instructor judgement. However, the lack of instrument experience has no bearing if the student is not going to fly on instruments. Likewise, the (presumed) lack of ability to fly through the air safely and land gently has no bearing if the student is only going to taxi at ten knots with a nosewheel. Instructor judgement would include this. Jose -- Nothing takes longer than a shortcut. for Email, make the obvious change in the address. |
#55
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Taildragger?
As far as I'm concerned, the type of airplane is irrelevant to the question. It bears on the skill required for taxiing, and the possible reasons for solo taxi practice before solo flight. Jose -- Nothing takes longer than a shortcut. for Email, make the obvious change in the address. |
#56
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An instructor can sit in an airplane and monitor student
skill, this is what instruction is, protect the student from their errors while they gain experience. First explain, then demonstrate, then practice. Critique, practice, eventually skill develops. Then solo, with a logbook and certificate endorsement. Still, no passengers and a flight check at least every 90 days in each make and model. For a certificated land pilot, 90% of the seaplane rating is how to taxi, sail and dock, beaching, and the rules of water navigation. Yet no seaplane instructor would allow a student to practice solo in the seaplane, yet if the instructor in a land plane or seaplane is just sitting there, not flying or riding the controls, the student is effectively "solo." When the student has demonstrated skill and judgment, the instructor takes the steps to advance the student to the next level. -- James H. Macklin ATP,CFI,A&P "Jose" wrote in message t... | Taildragger? | As far as I'm concerned, the type of airplane is irrelevant to the question. | | It bears on the skill required for taxiing, and the possible reasons for | solo taxi practice before solo flight. | | Jose | -- | Nothing takes longer than a shortcut. | for Email, make the obvious change in the address. |
#57
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For a certificated land pilot, 90% of the seaplane rating is
how to taxi, sail and dock, beaching, and the rules of water navigation. Yet no seaplane instructor would allow a student to practice solo in the seaplane Then you'd agree that the ability to taxi a land plane (on land) has little bearing on the ability to taxi a seaplane (on water). One without the skills to solo a seaplane could very easily have the skills to taxi a land plane (or even fly it). One without the skills to fly any kind of plane could still have the skills to taxi a nosewheel landplane safely solo (but not have the skills to taxi a tailwheel landplane safely solo). This gets down to instructor judgement, and the type of plane (sea, land, nosewheel, ski) makes a difference in what would be considered good judgement. Jose -- Nothing takes longer than a shortcut. for Email, make the obvious change in the address. |
#58
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Doing this in my opinion fogs the issue of pilot responsibility for the
student, who can now easily start to believe that responsibility for the safety of an airplane can be assumed in steps....or gradually, as the case may be. I disagree. It is not the responsibility that is transferred in steps, but rather, the authority (whether self imposed or not). A pilot who is endorsed for solo flight has full responsibility for the flight during all its stages, but is not (typically) authorized to fly at night or on instruments. That comes later, with experience (and often, with other endorsements, which could include certification). A smart, newly minted instrument pilot does not give himself the =authority= (I'm stretching the word here but I trust you get the concept) to fly in convective activity, the edge of icing conditions, or widespread low IFR; that too comes later with experience (and equipment capability). But the responsibility for the flight always rests with the pilot. I don't see how letting a student (who has demonstrated his ability, irrespective of the number of hours he has) taxi an airplane solo prior to being ready for and endorsed for actual through-the-air flying transfers only =partial= responsibility for the handling of the aircraft. Jose -- Nothing takes longer than a shortcut. for Email, make the obvious change in the address. |
#59
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I think it is always "bad instructor judgment" to allow a
student who has not yet soloed and been properly endorsed to operate an airplane of any type or configuration as the only occupant of the airplane. Whether the student has the skill or judgment to taxi a trike, tailwheel, seaplane or skiplane, they are NOT yet good enough to do so until they have enough skill and experience to rate the solo endorsement. Now, if they are on an island about to be hit by a tidal wave and there are just enough planes and seats to take everybody to safety and one lane has to be flown solo by a student pilot, your exercise emergency authority and go. The skill required to taxi is vitally important to flying, you can't take-off or land without taxiing. You can crash during taxi. The FAA/NTSB accident and incident reports indicate that taxiing is a very hazardous area of operation. So for me, students are either dual or endorsed and supervised. -- James H. Macklin ATP,CFI,A&P -- The people think the Constitution protects their rights; But government sees it as an obstacle to be overcome. some support http://www.usdoj.gov/olc/secondamendment2.htm See http://www.fija.org/ more about your rights and duties. "Jose" wrote in message t... | For a certificated land pilot, 90% of the seaplane rating is | how to taxi, sail and dock, beaching, and the rules of water | navigation. Yet no seaplane instructor would allow a | student to practice solo in the seaplane | | Then you'd agree that the ability to taxi a land plane (on land) has | little bearing on the ability to taxi a seaplane (on water). One | without the skills to solo a seaplane could very easily have the skills | to taxi a land plane (or even fly it). | | One without the skills to fly any kind of plane could still have the | skills to taxi a nosewheel landplane safely solo (but not have the | skills to taxi a tailwheel landplane safely solo). | | This gets down to instructor judgement, and the type of plane (sea, | land, nosewheel, ski) makes a difference in what would be considered | good judgement. | | Jose | -- | Nothing takes longer than a shortcut. | for Email, make the obvious change in the address. |
#60
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