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Velocity173
So how many people have died from this so called deadly design defect? Thought so. What I find funny is that he keeps trying to link a possible placarded warning with a defect. One has nothing to do with the other. My UH-60 flight manual has probably over 100 warnings in it and none point to a defect. Why? Because a warning warns of a practice; untie the rotor blades prior to starting the engines. Any defects are corrected through the life of an aircraft and aren't put as some advisory placard.
If it truly was a defect the FAA wouldn't have certified the aircraft in the first place. It's not like this is some flaw that's cropped up over time through testing, flight hours, fatigue etc. it's the way it was designed and certified. Apparently the FAA has no problems with it. Even the CAA doesn't consider it a defect. They simple feel it's noteworthy as a placard, while the FAA doesn't think so.
If it truly was a defect the FAA wouldn't have certified the aircraft in the first place. It's not like this is some flaw that's cropped up over time through testing, flight hours, fatigue etc. it's the way it was designed and certified. Apparently the FAA has no problems with it. Even the CAA doesn't consider it a defect. They simple feel it's noteworthy as a placard, while the FAA doesn't think so.
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