BRS website has photos:Fwiw- this was a 172 with a BRS STC.
Anyone know where the handle is located in a retro-installation?
And expensiveThat's embarrassing.
Does this count as a BRS "save"?
I’ve worked with people who put in the effort necessary to make those kind of mistakes.Looks kinda hard to do accidentally
If it saved the plane from slowly rolling back down the incline they had just pushed it up...Does this count as a BRS "save"?
Chute was pulled and damage to the aircraft was minimal other than the canopy that blows off when the chute opens…and the need for reupholstering the pilot’s seat…Does this count as a BRS "save"?
There's no "Replace After Flight" placardThe first photo shows a safety pin. Shouldn't that have been in place after landing and before leaving the airplane?
Instructor: After I interviewed the student why he pulled that handle he responded that he didn’t know what it was, so he assumed that it had to be the parking brake.
Again, this student had flown this make and model multiple times before.
Just wow... Before I solo'ed I had already learned not to use the park brake on a C-152 or a C-172.
Doesn’t look like the after landing check list was done,only a guess.
250 hours in 172s and he appears to not know the parking brake handle? He might want to start studying the POH for getting checked out in a 709.
(I know he won’t get a 709 over it, it was just an easy shot at a dorky joke.)
Sometimes the tuition to these express schools of higher learning ain't cheapWell, the good news here is that he's learned the lesson and won't do that again.
"Pull early, pull often..."I think pulling handles that you don't know what they do is worse than forgetting that you need to pull a handle. JMO
Pulling a red handle you know nothing about , especially a handle that has a sticker on it that says “BRS” … I don’t know , seems rather careless.
BRS website has photos:
Looks kinda hard to do accidentally
The Cessna parking brakes wear out quickly. The mechanism is just light stuff. In the 150 it was just small jam plates on the master cylinder pushrod, and those plates have holes designed to jam the rod when they're cocked. The edges of the holes wear and lose their grip. It's the same idea that a lot of household screen doors used on their closers, to hold the door open.Really isn't that unusual though. A lot of flight schools don't use them because they are prone to fail. Also very common to leave off if there is any chance the aircraft may be towed or repositioned. I can only think of one aircraft I've flown that we ever used the parking brake, and that was a plane with no toe brakes and only a handbrake. Setting the parking brake was mandatory for runups.
Heck, the airplane I own I've never used the parking brake, not really even sure how or if it works.
Heck, the airplane I own I've never used the parking brake, not really even sure how or if it works.
BRS website has photos:
I'd add, if this was a Cirrus it would be much more unusual, parking brakes aren't usually located on the roof. A floor mounted one would seem to make a little more sense it could be the parking brake. Maybe a human factor type thing?
The first photo shows a safety pin. Shouldn't that have been in place after landing and before leaving the airplane?