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- Apr 18, 2013
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Mantis Toboggan, MD
I find it interesting that, if the above is the case, the crack legal team "goaded them to maintain cautionary language in the AFM/POH" but let stand the narrative explicitly covering how to violate the alleged prohibition and the relatively benign flight characteristics ("some elevator oscillation may be felt at normal approach speeds. However, this does not affect control of the airplane") if one chooses to violate them.Here's why my reply above is moot: Even if ongoing flight testing and operational experience determined that the whole sordid affair was a silly false alarm from the very beginning and there really is nothing to see here folks, the fact remains that Cessna once considered the act of slipping a 172 with full flaps dangerous enough to include a statement prohibiting it. And that fact could become legally admissable and potentially damaging evidence in a civil proceeding. A sharp lawyer could turn it into a hazardous "design flaw," with the right expert witness and a jury of people who think that light aircraft are noisy, polluting, dangerous rich people's toys that should be banned. Cessna's legal department probably goaded them to maintain cautionary language in the AFM/POH regarding the issue, as part of a defensive strategem.
I contend that the first sentence is a necessary but not sufficient condition for the second. I strive for both, but couldn't come up with a short tagline expressing itIt's one thing to know them. It's quite another thing to know when to push them, and when not to.
Nauga,
and a "push here" placard