weekend pilot
Filing Flight Plan
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weekendpilot
without being specific my question will not be able to get answered properly
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You do know that there are a whole list of things that a pilot owner is allowed to do under preventative maintenance, specifically including seats, right?hello i know of a plane that experienced a non injury incident . This owner operator is notoriously known to work on his own plane... the day of the incident he was seen with the seats out messing with the plane. His story of what happened is totally the opposite of what the faa assumes so far. Luckily there was no injuries to himself or the passenger. Not sure weather to be silent or report to prevent further safety issues in the future for himself and others.
Let the FAA do their job. Nothing you've said so far is indicative of a need to get involved.(15) Replacing seats or seat parts with replacement parts approved for the aircraft, not involving disassembly of any primary structure or operating system.
IT WAS MISSING A LOG BOOK ENDORSEMENT FOR MONTHS!? HOW DID THE PLANE STAY IN THE SKY ALL THAT TIME!?flew for a few months without a proper log book endorsement
What would you think about this guy if he reported you to the FAA for something he thinks you did?hello i know of a plane that experienced a non injury incident . This owner operator is notoriously known to work on his own plane, he is not a certified mechanic and flew the plane for a few months without a proper log book endorsement. the faa is investigating this incident . the day of the incident he was seen with the seats out messing with the plane. His story of what happened is totally the opposite of what the faa assumes so far. Luckily there was no injuries to himself or the passenger. Not sure weather to be silent or report to prevent further safety issues in the future for himself and others.
Unless you know for a fact that whatever he did or did not do to the airplane was causal to incident, I'd stay out of it. If the FAA wants to find something, he's on their radar now.
It's also perfectly legal for the pilot/owner to take the seats out. Maybe he was fixing the carpeting, or any of a dozen or more perfectly good reasons to take the seats out to check/fix something
“Notoriously known” isn’t evidence, Karen.
Disregard my previous post. Definitely take Tarheel's advice. It would be the best thing for everyone.I think you should call the local field office, make an appointment and tell the inspector everything you know, in person.
That’s the best way for this to all work out as it should.
Not even the OP seemed to know.What are we talking about?
I never saw the post, but what you're describing sounds like A Very Big Deal. Because if it's not A Very Big Deal, then most of that stuff isn't going to happen. If it was indeed A Very Big Deal and someone has material information, as your post suggests, that person should probably share it.The FAA is already involved in the incident. Feel free to call them up and add your two cents worth. From what you've posted (and then deleted) it seems to fall into the hearesay category which means "That's nice, can you prove it?"
At the end of the day, the BEST case scenario for you is that they say thank you and nobody ever talks to you again about the incident.
On the other hand, If it goes as you're hoping (you're their star witness, the guy who pointed them to the smoking gun, etc), you can look forward to:
- Interviews with the FAA (note plural)
- Interviews with the guy's attorney and / or Insurance company (note plural)
- Subpoenas to court (civil or criminal from his insurance company, Criminal from whatever local laws he violated [you do want this guy punished as hard as possible, right?])
-- Usually several appearances
-- Usually inconvenient time for you and / or your job and / or your family
-- If you get to testify, you will be made to be the bad guy and / or incompetent by the guy's lawyer
- Lifetime of this guy knowing that you're the one who tried to get him into deeper trouble with the FAA
So, my suggestion is trust the FAA to ferret out the relevant information. But if you simply must fulfill your appointed duty and be sure they have your pieces of the puzzle, by all means call them up.
If you decide to call them up, let us know how the dice land.
I never saw the post, but what you're describing sounds like A Very Big Deal. Because if it's not A Very Big Deal, then most of that stuff isn't going to happen. If it was indeed A Very Big Deal and someone has material information, as your post suggests, that person should probably share it.
I never saw the post, but what you're describing sounds like A Very Big Deal. Because if it's not A Very Big Deal, then most of that stuff isn't going to happen. If it was indeed A Very Big Deal and someone has material information, as your post suggests, that person should probably share it.
How many people have been injured by extensive corrosion to the tail cone? For comparison, how many people have been harmed by false accusations?To the MYOB crowd: let's assume that the OP actually saw something besides the seats being removed; something serious. At what point do you say that the plane should be grounded, and perhaps also the pilot? I never car if an idiot injures themselves, but I do worry a bit about others, who may inadvertently fly on a plane with, say, extensive corrosion in the tail cone.
To the MYOB crowd: let's assume that the OP actually saw something besides the seats being removed; something serious. At what point do you say that the plane should be grounded, and perhaps also the pilot? I never car if an idiot injures themselves, but I do worry a bit about others, who may inadvertently fly on a plane with, say, extensive corrosion in the tail cone.
"Hearsay." [/nitpick]
Let’s assume that instead of being a coward the op actually, I don’t know, asked him, the owner, why he had the seats out or was spraying the tail cone with salt water. Maybe the op would learn there was a good and legal reason the seats were out and it, while not brilliant, was perfectly legal reason to hose the plane in corrosives. But since tail cones are falling out of the sky onto innocents heads constantly I guess that does make it everyone’s business and totally worth ratting out the other guy because it is everyone’s god given right to be busybodies. No actually, MYOB.To the MYOB crowd: let's assume that the OP actually saw something besides the seats being removed; something serious. At what point do you say that the plane should be grounded, and perhaps also the pilot? I never car if an idiot injures themselves, but I do worry a bit about others, who may inadvertently fly on a plane with, say, extensive corrosion in the tail cone.
How many people have been injured by extensive corrosion to the tail cone?
Did the OP say the part about salt water, or is that a hypothetical?Let’s assume that instead of being a coward the op actually, I don’t know, asked him, the owner, why he had the seats out or was spraying the tail cone with salt water. Maybe the op would learn there was a good and legal reason the seats were out and it, while not brilliant, was perfectly legal reason to hose the plane in corrosives. But since tail cones are falling out of the sky onto innocents heads constantly I guess that does make it everyone’s business and totally worth ratting out the other guy because it is everyone’s god given right to be busybodies. No actually, MYOB.
Cracks aren’t personal injuries.Enough that there is an AD on it.
http://www.aero-news.net/index.cfm?do=main.ajTextPost&id=70a1bd9a-411b-473b-98fa-d0df58815cff
No, he or she didn’t. I was going over the top to make a point. Same as tail cones falling on peoples heads daily.Did the OP say the part about salt water, or is that a hypothetical?