I was recently taken to task for my definition of an emergency. Here is the definition from the AIM as published on AOPA (Underscore added by me for emphasis).
I would welcome a discussion of what constitutes an emergency -- hoping all of us are civil in the discussion.
Here are some examples I've heard of:
1. Pilot of Piper Cherokee taking off from airport, before attaining pattern altitude, has terrified passenger.
2. Two hours into cross-country pleasure trip (IFR flight plan) passenger experiences explosive diarrhea.
3. Air-taxi trip where landing-gear light doesn't come on. Commercial pilot is convinced it is a problem with the light, not the landing gear.
The statement in the following quote is precisely what the AIM is opposing:[SIZE=+2]Chapter 6. Emergency Procedures[/SIZE][SIZE=-2]REFERENCE-[/SIZE]
[SIZE=+1]Section 1. General[/SIZE]
[SIZE=-2]14 CFR Section 91.185.[/SIZE]
6-1-2. Emergency Condition- Request Assistance Immediately
a. An emergency can be either a distress or urgency condition as defined in the Pilot/Controller Glossary. Pilots do not hesitate to declare an emergency when they are faced with distress conditions such as fire, mechanical failure, or structural damage. However, some are reluctant to report an urgency condition when they encounter situations which may not be immediately perilous, but are potentially catastrophic. An aircraft is in at least an urgency condition the moment the pilot becomes doubtful about position, fuel endurance, weather, or any other condition that could adversely affect flight safety. This is the time to ask for help, not after the situation has developed into a distress condition.
b. Pilots who become apprehensive for their safety for any reason should request assistance immediately. Ready and willing help is available in the form of radio, radar, direction finding stations and other aircraft. Delay has caused accidents and cost lives. Safety is not a luxury! Take action!
I've always approached emergencies with a different mindset. If it's a "land as soon as possible" requiring priority handling, fire/rescue on the ground, or shutting down a runway, it's an emergency. Anything other than that requiring me to terminate what I'm doing is likely going to be an NAR (No Assistance Required).
I would welcome a discussion of what constitutes an emergency -- hoping all of us are civil in the discussion.
Here are some examples I've heard of:
1. Pilot of Piper Cherokee taking off from airport, before attaining pattern altitude, has terrified passenger.
2. Two hours into cross-country pleasure trip (IFR flight plan) passenger experiences explosive diarrhea.
3. Air-taxi trip where landing-gear light doesn't come on. Commercial pilot is convinced it is a problem with the light, not the landing gear.