MauleSkinner
Touchdown! Greaser!
Any idea when they removed it for most of us?In the 1960's, the required equipment for night flight in all aircraft included a D cell flashlight of at least 2 cell size, within reach of the pilot.
Any idea when they removed it for most of us?In the 1960's, the required equipment for night flight in all aircraft included a D cell flashlight of at least 2 cell size, within reach of the pilot.
Still in force in Canada:Any idea when they removed it for most of us?
602.60 (1) No person shall conduct a take-off in a power-driven aircraft, other than an ultra-light aeroplane, unless the following operational and emergency equipment is carried on board:
...
(g) a flashlight that is readily available to each crew member, if the aircraft is operated at night;
I have 130 hours and I just bought into this deal in May. My partners have ~500 hours each and have been in the partnership for 15 and 30 years. When I point to something and say "That needs fixed" and they reply "It's been like that for years and several A&Ps have never mentioned it," what am I supposed to do? I'm very much the noob in this deal and have no experience to back myself up.
I am thinking that you would be best off renting!This thread is almost the equivalent of me asking if I should have kids when I don't even have a crotch fruit ripener.
It’s no wonder your partners don’t want to pay to fix anything, they hardly ever fly, do they? 500 hours in 15 or 30 years is extremely minimal flying. As a 130 hour pilot, it may seem like 500 hours is a lot, but it’s not. It’s still “low time”, especially when it’s spread over 30 years. So they’re not as “experienced” as you think - don’t let them bully you into thinking you don’t know anything and that they are vastly more experienced that you. Heck, I know a guy who got his license just before COVID and already has 500 hours. It’s not really a lot of time.
And it would be a good exercise to see who the mechanic is and what his or her reputation is.
I wouldn’t say 500 hours is low. It’s not.
I’d like to believe your friend who now has 500 hours should be pretty proficient after a year or so of non-stopping flying.
EDIT: Just Googled….so it seems 35 hours a year is fairly typical:
https://www.planeandpilotmag.com/article/is-35-hours-enough/
Partners can be great, but there's a lot of selection bias in what people read and hear: people with great business partners are more likely to give interviews about how wonderful they are, write blogs, etc., while people with bad business partners end up quietly cutting their losses (sometimes including personal bankruptcy) and picking up the pieces.all other things being equal, business partners suck.
Well, if you figure someone is dedicated enough to the airport almost every weekend for an hour's flight, 35 hours would represent 2/3 of the weekends in the year — scratch the others for vacation, holidays, kids' sports meets, weather, or illness. And you figure that they're probably spending 3 hours to get that hour's flight (including driving to the airport, pre-flighting, etc), that's 105 hours/year, or almost 3 full-time work weeks each year committed to flying for even the "casual" 35-hour pilot.EDIT: Just Googled….so it seems 35 hours a year is fairly typical:
https://www.planeandpilotmag.com/article/is-35-hours-enough/
I see that in part as a “renter” issue…as an owner, you’ve got a lot more flexibility in your ability to fly more than an hour at a time.Well, if you figure someone is dedicated enough to the airport almost every weekend for an hour's flight, 35 hours would represent 2/3 of the weekends in the year — scratch the others for vacation, holidays, kids' sports meets, weather, or illness. And you figure that they're probably spending 3 hours to get that hour's flight (including driving to the airport, pre-flighting, etc), that's 105 hours/year, or almost 3 full-time work weeks each year committed to flying for even the "casual" 35-hour pilot.
My highest-hour years were when I was flying 8-hour, three-leg days for volunteer Hope Air flights as well as the occasional family or business trip. The hours enroute actually did mean something then, because they were all hand-flown, often in IMC (I didn't have my A/P yet). But otherwise, I'm fairly certain that a 4-hour flight doesn't provide 4x the experience of a 1-hour flight, especially if you're just monitoring the A/P and panel for a lot of it. There's still just one takeoff and landing either way. The big experience gain for the long flight is in weather knowledge, since you're likely to be flying through more than one system or front, and in (sometimes) dealing with an unfamiliar airport, so that you can't get away with cheats like "turn base at the boathouse."I see that in part as a “renter” issue…as an owner, you’ve got a lot more flexibility in your ability to fly more than an hour at a time.
My lowest year as an owner was about 50, all pleasure flying. Five or six of my 19 years of ownership were about 150.
Of course, that was before I had a family, which would probably prevent the traveling that I did with the airplane.
Just the fact that you’re “acting” (as opposed to just “logging”) PIC in an environment that wasn’t directly included in your dual instruction is going to improve your knowledge and skills. Generally, a local one-hour flight on a weekend isn’t going to allow for that.My highest-hour years were when I was flying 8-hour, three-leg days for volunteer Hope Air flights as well as the occasional family or business trip. The hours enroute actually did mean something then, because they were all hand-flown, often in IMC (I didn't have my A/P yet). But otherwise, I'm fairly certain that a 4-hour flight doesn't provide 4x the experience of a 1-hour flight, especially if you're just monitoring the A/P and panel for a lot of it. There's still just one takeoff and landing either way. The big experience gain for the long flight is in weather knowledge, since you're likely to be flying through more than one system or front, and in (sometimes) dealing with an unfamiliar airport, so that you can't get away with cheats like "turn base at the boathouse."
That's fair, but after 19 years, I've flown nearly everywhere within 400 nm of Ottawa in every direction. Flying over Maine to the Maritimes, across the Adirondacks or (with a dogleg) Western PA to NY, over New Hampshire towards Boston, north towards Val-d'Or, west towards Sault Ste Marie, SW towards Toronto (and beyond) etc. are all nearly as familiar to me as my local area; almost more so. And when I go further, it's mostly just more of the same — I didn't really learn much more flying 1,150 nm west to WInnipeg than I'd already learned on frequent flights 375 nm west to Sault Ste Marie (except that Lake of the Woods is beautiful at dawn, flying eastbound). Even if you keep going further and further, you hit diminishing returns past 1,000 hours of the same kind of flying, including long cross-countries.Just the fact that you’re “acting” (as opposed to just “logging”) PIC in an environment that wasn’t directly included in your dual instruction is going to improve your knowledge and skills. Generally, a local one-hour flight on a weekend isn’t going to allow for that.
That’s the majority of my personal flying time…Cross-country or local, climb into the traffic pattern.I've discovered the different set of skills needed for low-level pilotage within an hour or two of Ottawa. I actually know what the county roads are called now, what rivers lead to what towns, etc. I can recognise where I am by what direction the power lines cut through the town or where the bend in the highway is, without the need for map or GPS. That's the kind of flying the biplane and Cub owners have always known, but I skipped straight past it into my instrument rating and long cross-countries at 7,000-10,000 ft AGL, following at first the ADF needle or VOR CDI, then the magenta line. I don't regret that — I still enjoy IFR, and am proud of my skills — but I missed out on a lot that way, .
I find 1,500–2,000 ft AGL just about right for my taste when I'm doing local-ish VFR flights by pilotage. It keeps me above most towers, but I'm still low enough to count the cows.That’s the majority of my personal flying time…Cross-country or local, climb into the traffic pattern.
I think I read somewhere that "a low time pilot is anyone who has fewer hours than you. A high time pilot is anyone who has more..." I know when I had 150 hours, 500 seemed like a huge insurmountable obstacle, and pilots who had that must know everything.
It's a matter of opinion and perspective, of course. But I just saw a study (based on Paul Craig's "The Killing Zone") that suggested the accident rate really doesn't level off until the pilot has 2000+ hours. So I would say that if someone's hours are in that range where lack of experience causes a higher likelihood of accidents, that could be called "low time". Before reading that, I was going to suggest 1500 hours as a good (but completely arbitrary) dividing line. I'm at 3400, and wouldn't consider myself anywhere near high-time. I'd call myself solidly mid-time. I might put the divisions at 2000 and 10,000 hours.
Yes, this means that many, many hobbyist pilots will always be considered low time. But isn't that appropriate? True proficiency, in my opinion, can really only come from flying at least a few times a week. In Jimmy Doolittle's autobiography, he states that he took himself off active flying status when he no longer had the time to fly 25 hours A MONTH. He didn't think anything less than that would keep him acceptably proficient.
Proficient, yes I'd agree. But still low time.
My experience as a CFI would support this.
I don't know of any pilots that have been flying for 200 years.or a 2000 hour plus pilot who flies 10 hours a year only in VFR CAVOK weather on a long XC flight?
Let me ask you this:
Would you rather send your family with a fresh IFR pilot who has done dozens and dozens of approaches, recently flown in hard IMC for 10 hours+, and has been on with ATC non-stop for the last several months or a 2000 hour plus pilot who flies 10 hours a year only in VFR CAVOK weather on a long XC flight? I know who I would choose.
(note this was the exact same question given by Doug Stewart of Pilot Workshops to make the point that your total number of hours is meaningless without context)
Your hypothetical pilots are also meaningless without context. I've seen freshly minted instrument pilots that were good and I've also seen a lot that I'd never want to ride with in bad weather. The same thing is true of higher time pilots.
Thankfully, most fall somewhere in between the extremes and are probably ok.
A better question is how many hours have you flown in the last 3-6 months?
I don't think that proves much either. Some folks fly as terrible as ever, even with recent experience and others can go for long periods of inactivity and be fine. Based on my experience as a flight instructor, the higher time pilots generally deal with long periods of inactivity or low activity much better than low time pilots do.
I don't know of any pilots that have been flying for 200 years.
In reality, numbers in a logbook mean almost exactly nothing, and recent experience isn’t much better.You are proving my point. Thanks.
A better question is how many hours have you flown in the last 3-6 months?
Or more likely they can get back into the swing of things faster (a bit more rust resilient).
So a 10,000-hour pilot with three jet types who can’t figure out how to fly a SID reflects accurately on his logbook? Or a 16,000-hour retired airline captain who can’t get through initial training in a corporate jet?To say hours in a logbook mean nothing, is flat out moronic.
20k hours of flying back & forth across the country, with the autopilot on.
But all that time dealing with constant severe weather, CAT approaches, possible airplane issues, extended overwater, complex arrivals across the country at three times the speed of small aircraft, medical situations in the back, constantly going into and out of the worlds busiest airports…
I guess that all means nothing because the autopilot is engaged enroute.
Not sure what you’re saying with your first statement.So a 10,000-hour pilot with three jet types who can’t figure out how to fly a SID reflects accurately on his logbook? Or a 16,000-hour retired airline captain who can’t get through initial training in a corporate jet?
On the first one I’m saying the guy was so ****ing stupid that he couldn’t figure out how to fly a SID. And that wasn’t his only issue. He quit before they could fire him, got hired as a walk-on captain at another place and was fairly quickly downgraded to permanent SIC, according to one of the guys I’m working with now.Not sure what you’re saying with your first statement.
Your second, corporate airplanes are much different than airliners. It is a tough transition. I have flown both. I have yet to see one who didn’t make it through training, and I was a company check airman.
That said, 16,000 hrs is pretty light for a retired airline Capt. But, that is irrelevant.