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A friend of mine told me what he considered a "funny" story.
He had to go to a business meeting about 200 miles away so he contracted a pilot with a C206 and they agreed to meet at the airport at 0600. No matter that the runway is NOTAMed closed until 0700 because crews are resurfacing it overnight.
They show up at the airport and sure enough, the crews are working on the middle of the runway. Pilot walks over, talks to the foreman who says "can't stop work, we need to be done by 7 to reopen". Pilot says "I don't need the whole runway, 3000ft is enough". Foreman replies "I can't tell you what to do but I cannot move the surfacing rig off the runway".
My friend thinks nothing of it, afterall the pilot is a smart man, he's been certificated by the FAA, right? They wouldn't hand out a pilot's license, specifically a CPL, to just any yahoo. *rolleyes*
Friend says they did an engine check before taxiing onto the runway (I assume a full run-up). The pilot fireballs it for takeoff and the engine sounds like crap and is missing on some of the 6 cylinders (my friend knows cars).
So I logically ask the friend how late he was to the important meeting and he said he wasn't late. Okay, I guess they had plenty of time to drive 3 hours, cool. I then follow-up with a question what needed to be fixed and he says that three of the fuel lines to the injectors were partially clogged and that a mechanic at the destination fixed it.
Naturally I swallowed hard and asked the stupidly obvious question: "you continued the takeoff?"
He said "yeah, we barely cleared the machinery on the runway", with a smile on his face.
And then they happily and obliviously continued to their destination for about an hour.
I told my friend to stay away from that pilot. I am afraid that he won't take my advice, though.
I thought I'd share this story to make y'all feel better about making the right choices and staying on the ground when technical difficulties strike.
Lesson learned: not all of us are smart.
He had to go to a business meeting about 200 miles away so he contracted a pilot with a C206 and they agreed to meet at the airport at 0600. No matter that the runway is NOTAMed closed until 0700 because crews are resurfacing it overnight.
They show up at the airport and sure enough, the crews are working on the middle of the runway. Pilot walks over, talks to the foreman who says "can't stop work, we need to be done by 7 to reopen". Pilot says "I don't need the whole runway, 3000ft is enough". Foreman replies "I can't tell you what to do but I cannot move the surfacing rig off the runway".
My friend thinks nothing of it, afterall the pilot is a smart man, he's been certificated by the FAA, right? They wouldn't hand out a pilot's license, specifically a CPL, to just any yahoo. *rolleyes*
Friend says they did an engine check before taxiing onto the runway (I assume a full run-up). The pilot fireballs it for takeoff and the engine sounds like crap and is missing on some of the 6 cylinders (my friend knows cars).
So I logically ask the friend how late he was to the important meeting and he said he wasn't late. Okay, I guess they had plenty of time to drive 3 hours, cool. I then follow-up with a question what needed to be fixed and he says that three of the fuel lines to the injectors were partially clogged and that a mechanic at the destination fixed it.
Naturally I swallowed hard and asked the stupidly obvious question: "you continued the takeoff?"
He said "yeah, we barely cleared the machinery on the runway", with a smile on his face.
And then they happily and obliviously continued to their destination for about an hour.
I told my friend to stay away from that pilot. I am afraid that he won't take my advice, though.
I thought I'd share this story to make y'all feel better about making the right choices and staying on the ground when technical difficulties strike.
Lesson learned: not all of us are smart.