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- Jun 7, 2008
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- Indian Hills Airpark Salome, AZ
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N1431A
Heh, same question. This was the last thing on my mind before i took my first lesson.I can't imagine what precipitated this thread
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rQUOTE="JonH, post: 2259186, member: 29897"]I came close, but he passed me up for someone with a GoPro mounted to the fuselage. I never heard how that panned out.
Then a helicopter landed and he was gone.
Just wondering if anybody here has ever had a ramp check, and if so what became of it? I can understand if your clearing customs where that might be a possibility, but if your strictly a domestic flyer have you ever had an FAA contact?
He had a high wing - us low wing guys don't have room for that stuff! .
Most of my flights are with the same plane, same fuel, and just me, so I don't do a W&B each time. Somebody once suggested printing a W&B for my normal flight configuration and keeping it in my flight bag just in case, might be a good idea.
No, just be within the envelope - you don't need to do a calculation if you know that's the case, as in flying alone in a 172, for example.I thought the W in "AROW" referred to the weight & balance report that's often part of the POH - the one that indicates the empty weight and location of the empty weight CG, and is occasionally revised to reflect equipment changes (see below).
Are we required to immediately produce a weight & balance calculation for a particular flight?
Source: https://goo.gl/oFhDWk
Yes, I do the same. Covers all the extreme scenarios...the cg is too far aft only with me and a 200-lb passenger, less than 5 gal. of fuel and more than 90 lb. in the cargo area, and I've never had more than 20 lb. back there.I've never been ramped, but I printed a W&B with four scenarios, most forward (full fuel, no baggage), most aft (no fuel, max baggage), max weight (full fuel & baggage), and min weight (no fuel, no baggage) and keep that in the plane. All are within limits. Since it's a single seat and I'm the only one who flies it, that doesn't change so I never have to worry about it.
Just get a bigger hangar...my low wing and couch fit in my hangar just fine.Note to self. Nooners at nice hangar only possible with high wing. In interest of keeping options open that I don't need... never buy low wing. LOL.
That's the type of things you need to know as a CFI. What if a student asks you if they should purchase a low wing or high wing? They probably never considered the illicit affair tradeoff.Note to self. Nooners at nice hangar only possible with high wing. In interest of keeping options open that I don't need... never buy low wing. LOL.
Actually, low wings work well, your "nooner" participant can just bend over the wing. Works very well with the "Hershey bar wings" on the old CherokeesNote to self. Nooners at nice hangar only possible with high wing. In interest of keeping options open that I don't need... never buy low wing. LOL.
I have a couch, a futon, a desk in the back, a tool chest and some storage shevling - I could never set it up like the high wing guys can!Just get a bigger hangar...my low wing and couch fit in my hangar just fine.
I would think you would need to be able to show you're in W&B
He was out of line confiscating your paperwork. Then again, maybe he was doing you a favor by keeping you on the ground until the NOTAM lifted.Not a ramp check, but Jack's anecdote about an airshow reminded me... Many years ago I flew my T-Craft to an airshow a couple of hours away. Accompanying me in her own T-Craft was a girlfriend, but as she didn't have her certificate yet, her mother (who was a commuter pilot) was PIC. Anyway, we were running late and when we got there, the X's were already on the runways. Nothing was flying but the R/C model demo that opened the show, so we landed on the far end of the cross runway and parked our planes in the grass there. Walking over to the spectator area, we were met by an FAA guy who proceeded to ream us for landing at a closed airport and took our certificates. Uh oh. He said he'd see us later, so we sweated it all through the show... my friend's mother much more than me, of course, since her career was on the line. After the show, we found the FAA guy and after yelling at us some more, he gave us our stuff back and let us go with a warning.
I once tried and failed to get ramp checked just to be able to brag that I'd once been ramp-checked.
I was out for a local pleasure flight. Upon landing and taxiing back to my hangar, which faces the gas pumps, I noticed an FAA rep checking planes as they arrived for fuel (it's a popular fuel stop). I left my plane out in front of my hangar and messed around for a while instead of putting it up and leaving, just to give him a target of opportunity (I figured I had everything in order, and the regional FAA guy is known to be a fair feller). However, he never looked my direction, so I finally put'r up and left. Oh, well - maybe next time.