Once upon a time I might have just said if anybody asks, it worked when we did are run up and we will report it Maintenace after the flight.
One cold morning during start up the Master switch initially did not engage, cycling a couple times it engaged and we started the engine but the Low Voltage light did not go off after the start. Normally I would have aborted the flight right there, however thinking the Master switch was still having an issue due to the cold, I decided to proceed with the run up. A factor was I knew one of my students was doing the his oral for this Checkride and was scheduled to fly the plane after me with the DPE, I was hoping the issue was temporary due only the cold and warming the the airplane would resolve it. I proceed with the run up but were unable to get the alternator to come on line. I should have aborted the flight there or even sooner, but instead opted make a lap around the pattern hoping it would resolve itself, which it did not. I aborted the flight and advised the DPE and Maintenace that the airplane was grounded. When Maintenace started asking some questions about why I had flown the airplane, I initially started to mis-lead them saying that it failed in flight, but quickly realized that was the wrong thing to do and was a poor example to my students, the DPE, and Maintenance, so I admitted I has had been suckered into the kind of accident chain that I teach my student to avoid, and admitted I had knowing flown an unairworthy airplane. Incidents like this help to reset my level of tolerance for unairworthy item in aircraft, which was pretty high to begin with, but I allowed some outside factors to affect my judgement. When someone does start asking question, I need to be able to truthfully explain why I did what I did. If I start saying, “if anybody asks”, it is time to re-evaluate what I am doing.
As pilots we are given a lot of reponsibilty with little supervision. This is why the FAA is so harsh in penalties when they think pilot comprises their integrity. Their thinking is if they can’t trust you with small things, they can’t trust you with big things.
I know a CFI that had all if his rating revoked when the FAA found a fraudulent Transponder entry in his Aircraft Log. The CFI claimed he was unaware of it and his partner was responsible, The FAA argued that as a CFI (professional pilot) and an aircraft owner he was responsible for knowing all entries were legitimate.
Aborting the flight with a known, airworthy condition was absolute the right thing to do. Not only does a break the link in a possible accident chain, It can stop you and the CFI from potentially having to answer some uncomfortable questions about what happened.
A reputation for integrity is easy lose and difficult to earn back once lost.
Brian
CFIIG/ASEL