brien23
Cleared for Takeoff
Seems like their is no end of people that drive a car without a valid drivers license so one would expect some to fly without a cert./license.
I cannot speak for anyone before my time but I cannot think of a single pilot/airplane nut that would even attempt to fly without their ducks in a row. We seem to be a pretty law abiding bunch, at least in that sense.Doesn't negate the regulation.
Well, that's how they get ya...I knew of one person in Texas that didn't have a license. His wife had the license and medical and sat in the right seat and navigated and communicated while he flew. He could not get a medical because he had bypass surgery years earlier.
There were times he flew alone, and lots of people knew about it. Of course he is dead now......cancer.
An old friend of mine had his airplane stolen.I cannot speak for anyone before my time but I cannot think of a single pilot/airplane nut that would even attempt to fly without their ducks in a row. We seem to be a pretty law abiding bunch, at least in that sense.
An old friend of mine had his airplane stolen.
We're they law abiding?Was the thief uncertificated and shoeless as well???
And.......An old friend of mine had his airplane stolen.
Anyone I know?An old friend of mine had his airplane stolen.
Yeah, Scott Bennett. Did you know he was killed in an automobile accident last year? Actually, a year and a half ago;(Anyone I know?
I snicker when guys tell stories about how many guys they know.....
I cannot speak for anyone before my time but I cannot think of a single pilot/airplane nut that would even attempt to fly without their ducks in a row. We seem to be a pretty law abiding bunch, at least in that sense.
Guilty.
At age 11 I built my first "boy carrying glider" from a set of plans published in a book written in 1919.
I had no help, I had no idea what I was doing, and the end result was even worse than you can imagine.
While recovering. my dad handed me a couple of books to read on flight theory and the pilots how-to manual from 1941, and tried it all over again the next summer.
No one went to the hospital, but the results weren't substantially better.
This went on, unabated, until I went to work washing airplanes at the local seaplane base at age 14, and I got some flying lessons.
Chapter 1: where it all went right(or wrong)Guilty.
At age 11 I built my first "boy carrying glider" from a set of plans published in a book written in 1919.
I had no help, I had no idea what I was doing, and the end result was even worse than you can imagine.
While recovering. my dad handed me a couple of books to read on flight theory and the pilots how-to manual from 1941, and tried it all over again the next summer.
No one went to the hospital, but the results weren't substantially better.
This went on, unabated, until I went to work washing airplanes at the local seaplane base at age 14, and I got some flying lessons.
Yeah, Scott Bennett. Did you know he was killed in an automobile accident last year? Actually, a year and a half ago;(
Nobody I know goes around telling anyone how they don't have a pilot cert or current medical. I snicker when guys tell stories about how many guys they know....
So what's the downside here if you get caught? Slap on the wrist? Time in jail?
Yep, bad deal. Jeep rollover on highway with no seatbelt. Left wife and two daughters, late teens and early twenties, I believe.Damn. I did not know that. Sucks.
Chapter 1: where it all went right(or wrong)
Guess Lake Hood doesn't take those HIPPA rules too seriously? And they lock up the "copies" in a secure container, right? So as not to compromise your PII, as name, address and DOB are on the medical; and maybe some other medical info under "Limitations"?Nobody I know goes around telling anyone how they don't have a pilot cert or current medical. I snicker when guys tell stories about how many guys they know....
Lake Hood requires anyone with a tiedown to provide a copy of a current medical. When that policy was adopted a few guys moved off airport to private tiedowns. Don't think the airport and the FAA weren't paying attention. There's no rule that requires an owner to have either a cert or a medical so no law against owning an airplane. There are rules about flying them.
Anyone around aviation in Alaska knows somebody, or several somebodys, who've died in airplane accidents. We have lots of airplanes. They're part of life in Alaska. Even non pilots take flying seriously here. The FAA takes flight safety VERY seriously here. Aviation weather cams are a good example. Accident stats have improved through the years, too.
HIPPA doesn't enter into it...now whether or not they can actually require a valid medical to rent a tie-down, that is a question. Likely a bluff on their part.Guess Lake Hood doesn't take those HIPPA rules too seriously? And they lock up the "copies" in a secure container, right? So as not to compromise your PII, as name, address and DOB are on the medical; and maybe some other medical info under "Limitations"?
Best they'd get from me is a copy of the copy, with address, DOB, and "Limitations" redacted. If they aren't a**holes (just sloppy and ignorant), I imagine that would do, make everyone happy. . .
granted, not a HIPPA expert - but - the FEDS require the medical, and publish med data on the document; it may/may be the FEDS could have an issue. But, either way, it's a sloppy practice, a quick-and-dirty, lazy way to enforce. . whatever they think they're enforcing.
All I can say is... at least he filed. There are plenty of jokers out there who try to sneak their way into and out of the clouds without talking to ATC. The real question is whether he was competent. If he was, then as far as I'm concerned it's between him and the FAA.I understand what you're saying, but I did. It was a small, country airport. Everyone seemed to know each others business, and none liked the guvment, so they got away with it. Didn't bother me either.
I actually knew this preacher who would file IFR when he didn't have an instrument rating and get onto to him, to no avail. Used to **** me off when I was up with a student in the soup and heard him enter the airspace talking with approach, in IMC.
All I can say is... at least he filed. There are plenty of jokers out there who try to sneak their way into and out of the clouds without talking to ATC. The real question is whether he was competent. If he was, then as far as I'm concerned it's between him and the FAA.
If not... I'd give him a wide berth if we were up at the same time, and maybe even (assuming I knew for sure that he was not only illegal, but so incompetent as to be a potential hazard) rat him out.
Airmen's certificate revocation
Not too worked up, just tiny bit put out this stuff still goes on. If your DOB etc. ain't on your medical, or you don't care, that's cool. I imagine (but could be wrong) that the copies ain't secured. Sloppy way to solve a problem, and fast-and-loose with other people's PII.Yawn. My med cert doesn't have any private or protected information.
Here's the statute. It keeps old derilect airplanes from occupying valuable spaces. I'm all for it. Been at Hood for 25 years and it's a better place now than it was before the regs. You guys sure get wound up about stuff that doesn't affect you!
http://www.legis.state.ak.us/basis/aac.asp#17.42.500
Doesn't matter to me whether he filed in advance or got a pop-up. If he's operating within the system and has the skills and knowledge to do so, I couldn't care less whether he's legal. That's between him and the FAA. The ones I'd turn in in a heartbeat are the ones ATC calls out to me, "VFR traffic 12 o'clock 2 miles, same altitude", when I know darn well it's solid IMC.I suspect he picked up a clearance as he neared the airport and realized it was IFR, not low but an overcast he'd have to go thru to get in. I don't think this particular individual was sharp enough to file.