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#1
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Others have offered practical information. I would add that it is illegal
to fly a airplane without known ice certification into forecast icing conditions. Mike MU-2 "Paul Tomblin" wrote in message ... I cancelled a flight yesterday because on top of strong gusty winds there was an Airmet Zulu for light to moderate mixed and rime ice, and on top of that the destination was reporting layers at about 2,000 and 4,000 feet, a freezing level of about 3,000 feet, with occassional ceilings of 800 feet and rain. It seemed to me that I could probably fly between or above the layers en-route, but I was worried about the possibility of having to descend through two layers of wet (and possibly icy) clouds and maybe have to do an approach to minimums in very gusty winds. I know I did the right thing based on my low level of experience, but any ice tips from the experts, especially up here in the Great Lakes area. -- Paul Tomblin http://xcski.com/blogs/pt/ An Emacs reference mug is what I want. It would hold ten gallons of coffee. -- Steve VanDevender |
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On Sat, 06 Nov 2004 23:17:08 GMT, "Mike Rapoport"
wrote: Others have offered practical information. I would add that it is illegal to fly a airplane without known ice certification into forecast icing conditions. Mike MU-2 Mike, In the nit-picky tradition, would that not be true only if the a/c had a placard or if the POH forbade it? --ron |
#3
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No, I believe that defense has been tried.
Mike MU-2 "Ron Rosenfeld" wrote in message ... On Sat, 06 Nov 2004 23:17:08 GMT, "Mike Rapoport" wrote: Others have offered practical information. I would add that it is illegal to fly a airplane without known ice certification into forecast icing conditions. Mike MU-2 Mike, In the nit-picky tradition, would that not be true only if the a/c had a placard or if the POH forbade it? --ron |
#4
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Others have offered practical information. I would add that it is
illegal to fly a airplane without known ice certification into forecast icing conditions. In the nit-picky tradition, would that not be true only if the a/c had a placard or if the POH forbade it? "Mike Rapoport" wrote in message ink.net... No, I believe that defense has been tried. This one runs and runs... AFAICS, the judgements are about violation of an aircraft limitation, or careless and reckless operation, or both. In those cases where there was no aircraft limitation (e.g. Boger EA-4525), the defendant had still attempted a flight that was sufficiently dumb for it to be careless and reckless. It doesn't necessarily follow that merely flying an aircraft without known ice certification into forecast icing conditions is, on its own, careless and reckless. It seems a pity that the NTSB's working definition of "known icing conditions" has been crafted in response to the far-fetched defenses of defendants who, on the whole, seem to have exhibited airmanship that falls far below the standard that we'd expect from most contributors here. If you argue extremes hard enough (e.g. that it's fine to continue a flight with significant ice accretion in a non-deiced aircraft on the basis that it's not 100% certain that there's ice in the next cloud so it can't be "known") you're bound to get some fairly robust responses. Julian Scarfe |
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On Sun, 07 Nov 2004 04:49:55 GMT, "Mike Rapoport"
wrote: No, I believe that defense has been tried. Mike MU-2 Yes, but I thought those violations were for "careless and reckless" and not for a violation of an (non-existent in the case) aircraft limitation. I've never heard of, for example, someone being violated (in a non-deiced small GA a/c under Part 91) for encountering ice, issuing a PIREP, and asking ATC for a deviation in order to escape. Have you? --ron |
#6
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You are probably right. I don't recall the exact case, I just remember
reading somewhere that a pilot tried using this defense and it didn't work.. IMO the FAA should either really enforce every regulation or it should get rid of the ones it isn't going to enforce. Mike MU-2 "Ron Rosenfeld" wrote in message ... On Sun, 07 Nov 2004 04:49:55 GMT, "Mike Rapoport" wrote: No, I believe that defense has been tried. Mike MU-2 Yes, but I thought those violations were for "careless and reckless" and not for a violation of an (non-existent in the case) aircraft limitation. I've never heard of, for example, someone being violated (in a non-deiced small GA a/c under Part 91) for encountering ice, issuing a PIREP, and asking ATC for a deviation in order to escape. Have you? --ron |
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