Near miss from space junk.
On Apr 2, 10:11 am, Mxsmanic wrote:
chris writes:
I fear it's even worse than you think, at least in this country, where
private aircraft ownership is quite rare. Most light a/c are either
aero club owned, i.e. 172 / Cherokee, or commercial, like Senecas and
the like.. And on the whole, avionics tends to get neglected. The
vast majority of club a/c wouldn't have GPS, let alone glass cockpits
or TCAS. I have seen inside some commercial operated light a/c like
Senecas and Aztecs and you'd probably be horrified at how basic they
are. Just a couple of ADFs and VORs and that's all they get. Maybe a
DME thrown in for good measure...
And don't think they get maintained either. If the a/c came with IFR
gear and isn't being used for IFR, like at an aero club, when things
like DME and VOR break down they don't get fixed, they just get
placarded as inop. Same as fuel gauges. Of 9 planes at our club,
only 4 have working fuel gauges!! The rest are just placarded u/s.
And the only reason there are 4 planes that have gauges that work is 3
of them are brand new a/craft. The deal with fuel gauges is, we know
the fuel burn and we have a stick to dip the tank on preflight, what
do we need gauges for ???
All the more reason to stick with simulation: all the avionics always work.
And if your club is skimping on maintenance of instruments, what else is it
skimping on? No wonder GA is so dangerous.
--
Transpose mxsmanic and gmail to reach me by e-mail.- Hide quoted text -
- Show quoted text -
As I tried to point out, the stuff that is placarded is the stuff
that's optional. I am not trained to use a VOR, for instance, so
having it placarded inop doesn't make any difference to me. All the
things I actually need definitely work.
And as far as maintenance goes, GA aircraft are required to have 100
hour checks, but we also do 50 hour checks and anything that needs
doing is put right or it doesn't go back into the air.
|