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Taking newbies flying...



 
 
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  #1  
Old December 14th 06, 12:27 PM posted to rec.aviation.piloting,rec.aviation.student
Stefan
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Posts: 578
Default Taking newbies flying...

Thomas Borchert schrieb:

Uhm, I'm afraid you are wrong. This is not illegal in the US. The word
"command" in PIC is taken seriously in the US - the PIC can decide what
happens onboard, including who is manipulating the controls. A PIC in
the US could sit in the baggage compartment.


I'm not sure he may hand over the controls to an unqualified person,
except if needed, of course. But always eager to learn something.

(Actually, I thought it to be legal myself earlier, deducing from the
sea laws. Then I've learnt that in aircraft, it is not, at least not
over here.)

Stefan
  #2  
Old December 14th 06, 04:56 PM posted to rec.aviation.piloting,rec.aviation.student
Newps
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Posts: 1,886
Default Taking newbies flying...



Stefan wrote:

Thomas Borchert schrieb:

Uhm, I'm afraid you are wrong. This is not illegal in the US. The word
"command" in PIC is taken seriously in the US - the PIC can decide
what happens onboard, including who is manipulating the controls. A
PIC in the US could sit in the baggage compartment.



I'm not sure he may hand over the controls to an unqualified person,


He may, at his discretion. Want to get a good discussion going, tell
them you're going to let your kid fly but you'll log the time. Gets the
logbook nazis all in a snit.
  #3  
Old December 14th 06, 05:15 PM posted to rec.aviation.piloting,rec.aviation.student
Jose[_1_]
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Posts: 1,632
Default Taking newbies flying...

I'm not sure he may hand over the controls to an unqualified person, except if needed, of course. But always eager to learn something.

In the US, there is no rule prohibiting that action. It is legal. If
there is an accident, there is always the universal "careless and
reckless" clause, but its use does not imply that =all= cases of turning
over the contorls would be careless and reckless. Only that this
particular (hypothetical) case, which =did= result in a crash, was.

One can clearly be careful and prudent when handing over the controls,
and one can be careless and reckless. This is true of any action.

Jose
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what they are." - (mike).
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  #4  
Old December 14th 06, 06:48 PM posted to rec.aviation.piloting,rec.aviation.student
Mxsmanic
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Posts: 9,169
Default Taking newbies flying...

Stefan writes:

I'm not sure he may hand over the controls to an unqualified person,
except if needed, of course.


He may hand over the controls to anyone. He is responsible for
whatever happens, but he is not required to be the person actually
controlling the aircraft.

And I think this is a good thing.

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Transpose mxsmanic and gmail to reach me by e-mail.
  #5  
Old December 15th 06, 12:11 AM posted to rec.aviation.piloting,rec.aviation.student
Robert Chambers
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Posts: 81
Default Taking newbies flying...

That's the key.. over there. There are more laws over there to tell you
how to behave than there are here. But never fear, this country is
catching up by adding laws to take away from personal responsibility.

For now though it's perfectly legal (in the U.S.)

Stefan wrote:
Thomas Borchert schrieb:

Uhm, I'm afraid you are wrong. This is not illegal in the US. The word
"command" in PIC is taken seriously in the US - the PIC can decide
what happens onboard, including who is manipulating the controls. A
PIC in the US could sit in the baggage compartment.



I'm not sure he may hand over the controls to an unqualified person,
except if needed, of course. But always eager to learn something.

(Actually, I thought it to be legal myself earlier, deducing from the
sea laws. Then I've learnt that in aircraft, it is not, at least not
over here.)

Stefan

  #6  
Old December 15th 06, 02:52 AM posted to rec.aviation.piloting,rec.aviation.student
mad8
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Posts: 52
Default Taking newbies flying...

does anybody know where the regulation is? i can't find it in the FAR
but then again, i'm not anywhere near an expert

Robert Chambers wrote:
That's the key.. over there. There are more laws over there to tell you
how to behave than there are here. But never fear, this country is
catching up by adding laws to take away from personal responsibility.

For now though it's perfectly legal (in the U.S.)

Stefan wrote:
Thomas Borchert schrieb:

Uhm, I'm afraid you are wrong. This is not illegal in the US. The word
"command" in PIC is taken seriously in the US - the PIC can decide
what happens onboard, including who is manipulating the controls. A
PIC in the US could sit in the baggage compartment.



I'm not sure he may hand over the controls to an unqualified person,
except if needed, of course. But always eager to learn something.

(Actually, I thought it to be legal myself earlier, deducing from the
sea laws. Then I've learnt that in aircraft, it is not, at least not
over here.)

Stefan


  #7  
Old December 15th 06, 05:17 AM posted to rec.aviation.piloting,rec.aviation.student
Peter Duniho
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Posts: 774
Default Taking newbies flying...

"mad8" wrote in message
ups.com...
does anybody know where the regulation is? i can't find it in the FAR
but then again, i'm not anywhere near an expert


There is no regulation. It's not prohibited, so there's no regulation that
says it's prohibited. The absence of such a regulation is how you know it's
not prohibited.


  #8  
Old December 15th 06, 05:20 AM posted to rec.aviation.piloting,rec.aviation.student
Mxsmanic
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Posts: 9,169
Default Taking newbies flying...

mad8 writes:

does anybody know where the regulation is? i can't find it in the FAR
but then again, i'm not anywhere near an expert


There isn't any. It's the _absence_ of a specific prohibition that
makes it legal. There has to be a licensed pilot in command on board
the aircraft, who takes responsibility for operation of that aircraft,
but nothing in the regulations requires him or her to actually be at
the controls ... which means that it is legal for anyone to control
the plane.

I believe it is indeed inherited from maritime law, wherein the
captain of a vessel is master and commander of that vessel with very
broad authority.

Note that refusing to obey the commands of the pilot in command would
be mutiny. So if the PIC tells a passenger to give up the controls
and the latter refuses to do so, it's a felony.

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  #9  
Old December 15th 06, 10:12 PM posted to rec.aviation.piloting,rec.aviation.student
TxSrv
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Posts: 133
Default Taking newbies flying...

Mxsmanic wrote:
...
I believe it is indeed inherited from maritime law, wherein
the captain of a vessel is master and commander of that vessel
with very broad authority.

Note that refusing to obey the commands of the pilot in
command would be mutiny. So if the PIC tells a passenger to
give up the controls and the latter refuses to do so, it's a
felony.


Oh, my. A private aircraft flight, not involving terrorism? A
federal criminal statute may exist, so if so, please cite it for
us, to prove you know how to research and understand the law.
Cite two numbers with "USC" in the middle. Forget state law; a
generic statute should fit, but it has nothing specifically to do
with pilots, airplanes, or maritime law.

F--
  #10  
Old December 15th 06, 11:06 PM posted to rec.aviation.piloting,rec.aviation.student
Jim Stewart
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Posts: 437
Default Taking newbies flying...

TxSrv wrote:

Mxsmanic wrote:

...
I believe it is indeed inherited from maritime law, wherein
the captain of a vessel is master and commander of that vessel
with very broad authority.

Note that refusing to obey the commands of the pilot in
command would be mutiny. So if the PIC tells a passenger to
give up the controls and the latter refuses to do so, it's a
felony.



Oh, my. A private aircraft flight, not involving terrorism? A
federal criminal statute may exist, so if so, please cite it for us, to
prove you know how to research and understand the law. Cite two numbers
with "USC" in the middle. Forget state law; a generic statute should
fit, but it has nothing specifically to do with pilots, airplanes, or
maritime law.


You might find this interesting...

http://www.usdoj.gov/usao/eousa/foia...9/crm01406.htm

The above scenario would seem to fit the
description of "interfering with a flight
crew" and reading the narrative, I would
tend to think it would apply to GA as well
as commercial flights. The act of refusing
to relinquish the flight controls does not
seem to meet the definition of mutiny,

http://www.usdoj.gov/usao/eousa/foia...9/crm01407.htm

though it might easily escalate to it...
 




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