Let'sgoflying!
Touchdown! Greaser!
I figure with the proliferation of much better torches these days, that rule has probably been long rescinded but I haven’t gone digging.
DD flashlight or equivalent.
I have not carried a DD flashlight for years, even when flying pt 135.
YesDD, as in two D cells?
Still there for 135/121/91F. “Or the equivalent” provides enough leeway that it’ll probably never change, although nobody seems to know what “the equivalent” is.
If you’re in an airplane that requires two D cells or the equivalent, your company will probably dictate what you have.You are right, it still says DD. Or equivalent. For Pt91.
I’m going to have up my ramp-arguing game in case it happens, “My tiny, Li-batt LED is 10x brighter, lasts 3x longer than your DD - is that equivalent enough for ya?”
Not Part 91. Part 91, Subpart F. Are you flying a Subpart F aircraft?You are right, it still says DD. Or equivalent. For Pt91.
I’m going to have up my ramp-arguing game in case it happens, “My tiny, Li-batt LED is 10x brighter, lasts 3x longer than your DD - is that equivalent enough for ya?”
Try the word "letdown" without the word chart. You'll find about a half dozen references in the FAR. It's dated, but it's really just a general term referring to the process of descending from the enroute structure to the runway. 91.175(a) now says:Hay, while we are looking at that section I see it refers to needing to carry Let-Down charts.
I have not heard that term in decades, and a quick search fails to show it in FAA documents I looked at.
Anyone seen it lately, or does that need a re-write too?
Well, that’s a letdown…They didn't catch everything
Still there for 135/121/91F. “Or the equivalent” provides enough leeway that it’ll probably never change, although nobody seems to know what “the equivalent” is.
You should be embarrassed.Well, that’s a letdown…
I had that surgically removed.You should be embarrassed.
yesNot Part 91. Part 91, Subpart F. Are you flying a Subpart F aircraft?
now all you have to worry about is that 2 lb projectile flying about in a crash.The two D cell flashlights aren’t necessarily weak. While the reg was written during incandescent days, I bought a DD cell LED for work. As bright as any flashlights at home.
Cool!
I'm disappointed the thread got this far without a boobie joke.
Gotta have a way to control the copilot in airplanes without a crash axe.DD seems to be an anachronism from the days of conventional bulbs that generate more heat than light. Or for people who need a flashlight that can serve double duty as a non-edged melee weapon. With LED bulbs you can get the same amount of light in a compact flashlight having smaller batteries. And the bulbs are more durable.
DD seems to be an anachronism from the days of conventional bulbs that generate more heat than light. Or for people who need a flashlight that can serve double duty as a non-edged melee weapon.
We couldn’t expect the FAA to specify light output, throw distance or any other values that have been used to rate flashlights for the past 20 years. They probably still think that Ray-O-Vac is the leading manufacturer of flashlights.DD seems to be an anachronism from the days of conventional bulbs that generate more heat than light. Or for people who need a flashlight that can serve double duty as a non-edged melee weapon. With LED bulbs you can get the same amount of light in a compact flashlight having smaller batteries. And the bulbs are more durable.
DD is overrated.
Well, true, but modern flashlight tech can now come with copilot ready stun guns...That's the problem with modern electronics. They've gotten so small and so light that they can no longer double as bludgeons!
I believe that was post 3...I'm disappointed the thread got this far without a boobie joke.
Just over a pound and it’s sits in a cargo net behind the pilots seat. If it becomes a projectile, then I’ve become a projectile. Unfortunately, until a CC letter comes out on what’s the “equivalent” it’s required equipment at night.now all you have to worry about is that 2 lb projectile flying about in a crash.
That's a serious dead battery storage device.Or stay defiant and old school with the 7D Maglite truncheon and exceed the regs.
I would guess that "or equivalent" would mean similar or better brightness and battery life.Still there for 135/121/91F. “Or the equivalent” provides enough leeway that it’ll probably never change, although nobody seems to know what “the equivalent” is.
My guess is that they don't think about it at all.We couldn’t expect the FAA to specify light output, throw distance or any other values that have been used to rate flashlights for the past 20 years. They probably still think that Ray-O-Vac is the leading manufacturer of flashlights.
What's their problem with large flashlights? Too much like a weapon?I dunno - depends on the frame.
I've found that larger flashlights get too much attention from airport security folks overseas, so I'm back to a small but bright LED model.