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Mike writes:
I always give each side a good heave up and down for this very reason, so such can easily be checked on the preflight for impending failure. It is unlikely that you can create the same magnitude and type of stress with "a good heave" that the aircraft would or could experience in flight. Certainly. But that's what pre-flight and annual inspections are for. My A&P found a cracked bulkhead in the tail on my first annual after I bought the plane. It had probably been that way for years. Such problems you mentioned are common, but how many airframes do you see breaking up in flight because of it? More than necessary. And an annual inspection provides a year for things to go wrong in flight. The preflight is just a simple way to find out if the aircraft is airworthy to the best of the pilot's ability. I never suggested it was anything else, so you should go back and check your inference for any degree of reasonableness. You said that if a pilot doesn't find damage, he hasn't done a preflight, which implies that a preflight will find all damage. Have you changed your mind? So why do you take a simple statement and take it to the nth degree? It is only necessary to show that the statement cannot stand, which has been done. The previous poster (who has no flight experience, btw) condemned partial ownership because another owner might "damage" the airplane and not tell anyone. It was a ridiculous statement to begin with because a proper preflight and regular inspections make such a non issue to the safety of flight. Except that this is not true. You made an absolute statement where a qualified one was required. If you don't want to get flamed, try working your way up the thread and figuring out what the context is before you jump on a comment and try to make it something it isn't. In the future, structure your statements more carefully, and you will not find yourself in a corner in debate. My "comment" was far more valid than yours, BTW. Your statement that, in effect, a preflight cannot fail to find damage and that a pilot who does not find damage has not done a preflight inspection was manifestly false, and does a disservice to pilots who do a thorough preflight inspection and yet die anyway as a consequence of damage that no preflight inspection can detect. |
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"Mxsmanic" wrote in message
... Mike writes: I always give each side a good heave up and down for this very reason, so such can easily be checked on the preflight for impending failure. It is unlikely that you can create the same magnitude and type of stress with "a good heave" that the aircraft would or could experience in flight. Nor is that the intention. Certainly. But that's what pre-flight and annual inspections are for. My A&P found a cracked bulkhead in the tail on my first annual after I bought the plane. It had probably been that way for years. Such problems you mentioned are common, but how many airframes do you see breaking up in flight because of it? More than necessary. How many do you think that is? The preflight is just a simple way to find out if the aircraft is airworthy to the best of the pilot's ability. I never suggested it was anything else, so you should go back and check your inference for any degree of reasonableness. You said that if a pilot doesn't find damage, he hasn't done a preflight, which implies that a preflight will find all damage. Have you changed your mind? Actually I said damage was a non-issue because of the preflight because any damage that would be an issue for the next flight is going to be found during the preflight. So why do you take a simple statement and take it to the nth degree? It is only necessary to show that the statement cannot stand, which has been done. The previous poster (who has no flight experience, btw) condemned partial ownership because another owner might "damage" the airplane and not tell anyone. It was a ridiculous statement to begin with because a proper preflight and regular inspections make such a non issue to the safety of flight. Except that this is not true. You made an absolute statement where a qualified one was required. Actually what I have done is show that your fear of "damage" by someone else is irrational and a weak point against partial ownership. So once again you've shown your "experience" is limited by what Microsoft FS can offer. If you don't want to get flamed, try working your way up the thread and figuring out what the context is before you jump on a comment and try to make it something it isn't. In the future, structure your statements more carefully, and you will not find yourself in a corner in debate. My "comment" was far more valid than yours, BTW. Your statement that, in effect, a preflight cannot fail to find damage and that a pilot who does not find damage has not done a preflight inspection was manifestly false, and does a disservice to pilots who do a thorough preflight inspection and yet die anyway as a consequence of damage that no preflight inspection can detect. Go do a search of the NTSB database sometime and see how many of those cases you can find, then tell me again about my "disservice". |
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