Samuel Seidel
Pre-takeoff checklist
How much experience should I receive before flying from the right seat?
How much experience should I receive before flying from the right seat?
It’s really only the takeoff and landing that feel different in the right seat. .
I suppose you could call the helicopter a “European invention” on the grounds that Igor Sikorsky was 12 and still living in Russia when he first had the idea of building a helicopter, but that has nothing to do with what side the PIC sits. Russians don’t drive on the left side of the road like Brits do.In helicopters, being a European invention, PIC is the right.
You know, until I saw what you just wrote i have always thought "what would I do..." if that happened. It had never crossed my mind to just hop over to the other side. I hope I'm the only one who had never thought of that...duhhh.My seat stop broke once at an airport (during preflight, luckily). I just moved to the right seat and flew. There is nothing to it.
Why? A safety pilot is not manipulating the flight controls, they are simply looking for traffic while the flying pilot is under the hood. Or was the right seat checkout required if you were acting as PIC front the right seat?The flying club I was in has a right seat checkout requirement. It was required if you wanted to fly right seat safety pilot for a left seater under the hood.
Lots of possibilities with a flying club. Could have had a member bend an airplane while flying safety pilot because he or she did the landing and botched it up not necessarily because of being in the right but more because he or she just sucked at landing. Could be a club president or safety officer who just doesn't trust that their members will be able to get it right the first time on their own and wants to be extra cautious. Could be the club governing body is just greedy and requires check flights for everything imaginable as a means to get more hours on the planes and more revenue in the coffers. Lots of possibilities with a club.Why? A safety pilot is not manipulating the flight controls, they are simply looking for traffic while the flying pilot is under the hood.
Nothing in 91.109(c)(1) requires the safety pilot to manipulate the flight controls. Why would the safety pilot do the landing? If they're operating the flight controls, they're no longer the safety pilot.Lots of possibilities with a flying club. Could have had a member bend an airplane while flying safety pilot because he or she did the landing and botched it up not necessarily because of being in the right but more because he or she just sucked at landing. Could be a club president or safety officer who just doesn't trust that their members will be able to get it right the first time on their own and wants to be extra cautious. Could be the club governing body is just greedy and requires check flights for everything imaginable as a means to get more hours on the planes and more revenue in the coffers. Lots of possibilities with a club.
No argument.Nothing in 91.109(c)(1) requires the safety pilot to manipulate the flight controls.
Because they want to.Why would the safety pilot do the landing?
Agreed. Your question was why would a flying club have such a policy. I gave some possible reasons. Nowhere in my answer did I claim the reasons would make sense. Which is the point I was making.If they're operating the flight controls, they're no longer the safety pilot.
Just make sure you remember if your aero-plane has toe brakes on both sides if you are landing from the right.... ask me how I know
No argument.
Because they want to.
Agreed. Your question was why would a flying club have such a policy. I gave some possible reasons. Nowhere in my answer did I claim the reasons would make sense. Which is the point I was making.
Flying clubs can be one of the most affordable ways to get access to very good airplanes. But its not always without down sides. Inane policies that don't enhance safety created by individuals who are concerned about safety issues that only exist in their minds are one of the potential downsides.
I've been in flying clubs, I know how they work, and the inane policies that result from stupid pilot tricks and well-intentioned board members. My question was not a question in general, but a question of why @IK04's flying club had the policy.
If the club wanted to make a rule about people in the right seat manipulating the flight controls, fine. But to make a rule about safety pilots getting checked out to fly...it doesn't make sense-- safety pilots don't manipulate flight controls; they look outside the window.
100% agree, it doesn't make sense. I guess I did not realize your only interest was hearing an answer from IK04 on the reason for the policy in that particular club. My apologies.I've been in flying clubs, I know how they work, and the inane policies that result from stupid pilot tricks and well-intentioned board members. My question was not a question in general, but a question of why @IK04's flying club had the policy.
If the club wanted to make a rule about people in the right seat manipulating the flight controls, fine. But to make a rule about safety pilots getting checked out to fly...it doesn't make sense-- safety pilots don't manipulate flight controls; they look outside the window.
How much experience should I receive before flying from the right seat?
My seat stop broke once at an airport (during preflight, luckily). I just moved to the right seat and flew. There is nothing to it.
You know, until I saw what you just wrote i have always thought "what would I do..." if that happened. It had never crossed my mind to just hop over to the other side. I hope I'm the only one who had never thought of that...duhhh.
How much experience should I receive before flying from the right seat?
Going strictly by the book, if your POH lists the left seat as required operational equipment, having it broken would render the aircraft unairworthy. That applies to the passenger seatbelt of every C172 I’ve ever flown as well, even if the seat is to be unoccupied. Of course, inspecting unoccupied seatbelts isn’t on the preflight checklist either, so….
some are arrivals accompanied by sound and fury.
Many POH's & FM's state where the pilot sits. An aircraft that I'm familiar with states in Section one, limitations, "The minimum crew for VFR is one pilot seated in the right seat." It's a helo and some switches and controls are reachable only from the right seat.Going strictly by the book, if your POH lists the left seat as required operational equipment, having it broken would render the aircraft unairworthy. That applies to the passenger seatbelt of every C172 I’ve ever flown as well, even if the seat is to be unoccupied. Of course, inspecting unoccupied seatbelts isn’t on the preflight checklist either, so….
I've been in flying clubs, I know how they work, and the inane policies that result from stupid pilot tricks and well-intentioned board members. My question was not a question in general, but a question of why @IK04's flying club had the policy.
If the club wanted to make a rule about people in the right seat manipulating the flight controls, fine. But to make a rule about safety pilots getting checked out to fly...it doesn't make sense-- safety pilots don't manipulate flight controls; they look outside the window.