LOL. Coming from the H
BIC himself, should I feel honored? LOL.
As always childish personal insults. And as always, I have made none.
QUOTE="Bell206, post: 3098727, member: 31758"]
That’s part of it. But whether you trust the mechanic or not you still have the final responsibility per the existing FAA guidance. I’ve stated this a number of times along with the references. It is what it is.[/QUOTE]
That was your big secret you claim to be saving people from with MB? Mmm-kay thanks for the obvious.
QUOTE="Bell206, post: 3098727, member: 31758"]
No. My assertion continues to be there are owners who request and pay mechanics to sign off improper maintenance. You’re continually stuck on it's all done without the owners knowledge. You’re wrong. This type work is done with intent by the owner. Improper work performed by APIAs without the owners knowledge for whatever reason is a separate topic which usually manifests itself in different ways.[/QUOTE]
NEGATIVE. I said two things. The owner knows exactly what the mechanic writes down, and most owners wouldnt know if that was correct or if it was done correctly.
Duh.
As you say, FAA thinks owners know more than their own trained and certified mechanics. Stupid of course. We don't.
I already share it with every post I make. No sticky post needed. As to it being “magic wisdom” or a “secret sauce” it’s not by any means. This stuff has been out in the public domain and written about for ages. No secrets, no magic. You just think it is.
Again NEGATIVE. You stated you were saving poor pilots from ol' MB regularly and didnt say how. For all I knew you were offering them diet advice for extra regularity. You didn't say.
Now that you've said it you still haven't explained how it saves anybody from anything. FAA still expects (wrongly) the untrained non-mechanic to magically know if you, MB, or any other mechanic, is blowing smoke up their butt. Or doing something wrong.
Nobody is living in their mechanic's shop 24/7. We drop the plane off, look over the written work order when presented, and say it looks reasonable from whatever our particular background is and any manufacturer instructions we can find. We aren't truly qualified by any stretch of the imagination to know if the mechanic or the inspector did it right.
Pilots rely on FAA to manage A&Ps and inspectors. Then FAA says we are magically responsible for airworthiness.
They're going to hand me a bill and a signed off logbook. I'm going to do a careful run up, test whatever was broken as best I can, look it over with whatever knowledge I can, maybe I researched it a bit in the hotel room, and I'll be along my merry way. Maybe an extra lap around the field.
If FAA thinks I know than their mechanics or wrenching on airplanes better than they do, they're delusional.
But that's not news. Why would you think it is?
So having published articles makes a person’s point more authoritative for you? Regardless I have written published articles. Several on PoA know them. But I prefer to take what I have written and learned and pay it forward via posts here and a few other sites. All free of charge. But since you need a hero to become a whole owner, here’s one article quote (not mine) that supports my statement above: owners are responsible for a mechanics work. Do you believe me now?
View attachment 97156
Never disbelieved you because it took you this long to state what you were teaching owners about in this thread. That we are PIC. We knew that already. We even teach it.
And I don't disagree with you that FAA thinks that's sane. If course in reality it isn't. But what's new with FAA? All sorts of owners know jack all about aircraft maintenance. We may pick up things over the years but we aren't mechanics.
Other than 30 years of reading that particular chunk of sky is falling from folks like yourself. Great. What do I do with that knowledge? Fly an extra lap around Podunk with an eye on the engine instruments after a long run up, is about it.
At home base I have a whopping choice of Shop Number One or Shop Number Two. Third busiest GA airport in the entire country. Two.
The reality is no matter what FAA wants, at some point I'm handing someone keys and trusting their system for managing their mechanics.
QUOTE="Bell206, post: 3098727, member: 31758"]
Ha. Not hardly. I don’t even consider myself in his league. But you on the other hand, are definitely in his league and can probably give him some stout competition. You both are primarily IT gurus, you both imply to have extensive aviation knowledge, you both have an extended online presence, and you both have worked on your own aircraft. The only place MB gets you is he has an APIA so he can sign off the work on his aircraft. Sounds right up your alley.
[/QUOTE]
Mike isn't an IT guru. I've seen his website. LOL.
I don't claim anything about my knowledge. All I can prove, like anybody else, is I met the minimum FAA standard for my certificates. I don't consider my knowledge extensive at all. I definitely don't claim to be a mechanic. I can claim to be an owner for over a decade, talked to a lot of owners, and ran the books for a small club for six years. Flown around the mountains a bunch. That's about it. -- Not sure who you're thinking of that claims any special knowledge.
I have no idea what an "extended online presence" is. I hang out here and talk aviation, I'm not on any other discussion sites other than having a couple logins I never use, I certainly don't have any fancy YouTube channels or any of that, and I read the same FB groups most other folks here do. Don't run any of em, and definitely don't have an aviation website.
I've never done anything serious work on my or any other aircraft. Not sure where you got that idea. I've posted here numerous times over decades that the "owner assist annual" is a myth around here. It's big shops that are backed up for months. They don't want owners anywhere near their shop floor.
Heck I don't think I've even done everything on the owner approved list in 30 years. I teach students the mechanics are the mechanics, and the things FAA says you have to check to see if a mechanic signed off on before you can legally fly this plane... And here's some bad things to watch out for on this model... the guy over in the shop knows a hell of a lot more about them than I ever will.
That's just the kind of shops we have. They're all multiple months behind, and assembly lines inside. Nice people and all, but it's not like Podunk where yours is the only plane in the shop and there's two mechanics. They've got em packed in wingtip to wingtip and it's a big hangar.
I like reading my maintence manual and seeing what Cessna says y'all do, but if FAA thinks I can monitor all of it... Well... Clearly I can't. I can hang out places like here and get a vague insight into stuff to look for that isn't in the books, and write the check and say thanks when it's back in my hangar with proper logbook sign offs and a long detailed receipt.
That's reality, no matter what they think I'm capable of without training.
Like most owners here, we go where the fleets go. Shop One or Shop Two. It'd be big news if Shop Three showed up.
I have to tell students the system works or they'd never get in a 40 year old machine.
Oh. And some folks on the Internet will tell ya the sky is falling. They've been saying that since I was dialing into CompuServe so... You read and decide.
Definitely not an airplane mechanic. Just a guy who's seen the same ones flying fine maintained at the local mega shops for three decades.
Same airplanes I flew as a renter almost 20 years ago.
I'll let the new guy I helped get an intro flight know the anonymous internet mechanic says somewhere non-spscific that there's bad mechanics and inspectors signing off on stuff they shouldn't and I'm sure his instructor will cover that he's always PIC.
You got something useful I should pass along to him? Other than FAA will pretend he's a qualified mechanic in 40 or so flight hours? LOL.
All that drama about THAT?
And even some impresive new mythology about me.
I thought maybe you were going to bring up something we didn't all already know. Worth a shot.
I'm PIC and an owner and have to accept an airplane I didn't work on. Color me shocked at such news. Yawn.