John Baker
Final Approach
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John Baker
I haven't met anyone who has. Anyone here who has, what happened?
John
John
I haven't met anyone who has. Anyone here who has, what happened?
John
Nathan's document is a tad outdated (like 20 years?) but the fundamentals haven't changed. Here's a link to the current document.Here is a document that describes how an FAA representative should conduct a Part 91 ramp check.
Anybody know how that typically works? Is there a guy at the FSDO whose job it is to do ramp checks, and does he just go sit at a different airport each day inside his District, and check each pilot he sees operating an aircraft? Or does he have to see something "off kilter" first?
Nope. Everybody's gotta do some every month. The Inspectors have a monthly sheet on which they log how many of each different task they have performed, and if they haven't done enough, the FSDO Manager chews on them.Anybody know how that typically works? Is there a guy at the FSDO whose job it is to do ramp checks,
Yes -- it's both. Sometimes they'll go out to do surveillance, and do random checks on airplanes coming and going. Sometimes they're out there on other business and see something happen, and go out and check the pilot involved. On occasion, they'll even go out and wait for a particular pilot they've targetted for "further review" (as they say in the NFL).and does he just go sit at a different airport each day inside his District, and check each pilot he sees operating an aircraft? Or does he have to see something "off kilter" first?
Most ramp checks are complaint driven. Someone complains and the FSDO inspector comes around.
Nope. Everybody's gotta do some every month. The Inspectors have a monthly sheet on which they log how many of each different task they have performed, and if they haven't done enough, the FSDO Manager chews on them.
Yes -- it's both. Sometimes they'll go out to do surveillance, and do random checks on airplanes coming and going. Sometimes they're out there on other business and see something happen, and go out and check the pilot involved. On occasion, they'll even go out and wait for a particular pilot they've targetted for "further review" (as they say in the NFL).
I haven't met anyone who has. Anyone here who has, what happened?
While not exactly a Ramp check, one of my favorite events was when I took a pilot our to the Citabria we had on the line for a Flight Review. As we reviewed the required documents we discovered there was not a stitch of paper work in the airplane. We went in and checked the signout logs and found that a local FAA inspector had flown it last as one of his currency flights. I know this inspector he is an excellent example of what a FAA inspector should be. A phone call to the inspector inquiring as to if he had seen the paperwork for the airplane when he flew it. I didn't hear exactly how he answered that question, but we had replacement paperwork for it in record time.
Brian
CFIIG/ASEL
Some years back a pal and I flew in for a $100.00 hamburger. I made the AIM approach--Mid field transistion 500 above pattern 45 degree entry--etc. My pal made the "Canadian" entry--mid field crosswind at pattern altitude and turn downwind. He then announced over the CTAF "Ha Ha I beat you!". We were looking over the menus when a chap approached us and asked "Who owns the green Cherokee?". Ron's troubles began then and didn't end for a couple of weeks.
Cheers:
Paul
N1431A
2AZ1
www.indianhillsairpark.com
Ron's troubles began then and didn't end for a couple of weeks.
He didn't know that a third class medical is (was) good for three years for people under 40.
Yes. Yes I have.
That's because it's not. It's good for FIVE.
From what I am gathering from this thread, ramp checks seem pretty common occurrences, yet since I've been flying, I've never met anyone who has. I've talked to old airport bums who have thousands of hours and never had it happen.
Yes. Yes I have.
Yes. Yes I have.
My last one was in 1991, at Brookhaven Airport, Long Island NY. It lasted about a minute or two, and the inspector asked for and looked at the required documents and wished us a nice day.
My theory is that the likelihood of having a ramp check varies inversely with your distance from the FSDO. At 180 miles from the closest one here, I don't know if we ever get visits from the FAA. At airports with an FAA office on the field, I would think they would walk outside at least a couple times a year.
Jon
One point to remember is that the inspectors get more brownie points for checking 121 and 135 operations, so they tend to gravitate towards those.
The FSDO's have a system called the Program Tracking and Reporting Subsystem (PTRS) by which they measure whether Inspectors are doing as much work as they are supposed to. Use of this system is mandated by FAA Order 1380.51, and is managed according to the PTRS Procedures Manual (PPM). They have must do so many of certain kinds of activity every month, and can substitute some number of one activity for some number of another based on a point system. You can find the PPM at http://fsims.faa.gov/wdocs/other/ptrs_procedures_manual.htm.Can you cite the document and they "system" that gives ASI's "more brownie points" for checking one operation vs. another? Also, define what a "brownie point" is and how it's applied to an ASI.