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#12
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Yeah, I have been watching for the TMMiTFM DVD for quite a while. So,
when I saw it was available a couple of weeks ago, I ordered it. Received it last week and already took a look. I was disappointed to notice just one mention of Derek Piggot in the additional photos and information. Other additional info is really interesting none the less. Anyone interested in the movie should also try to get the book - I found one at abebooks.com. All the best, Steve (Chip Fitzpatrick) wrote in message . com... Anyone remember the scenes in Those Magnificent Men in Their Flying machines with the German officer who can do anything? BTW, it is just out on DVD. Chip F |
#13
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At 17:06 29 March 2004, Eric Greenwell wrote:
Jim Vincent wrote: Since the glider has no recording tach or Hobbs it's been a habit of mine for decades to keep the log in the glider where I can keep it current after each flight. My glider is registered Experimental and the Operations Limitations state that the log book must be kept in the aircraft. I specifically asked the FAA whether I had to log immediately after every flight or could just update periodically. He said periodically was fine. Consequentely, my partner and I only update the logbook once a year at annual inspection. My operating limitations state: 'This aircraft shall contain the placards, markings, flight manual, etc., developed for this aircraft.' I recklessly fly without the flight manual in the glider! Has anyone been busted for doing this? If you carry it, have you EVER referred to it in flight? Is the German version acceptable, even if I can't read German? I imagine a pilot nearing Vne in a steepening spiral, thumbing through the pages, looking for G loadings with/without spoilers open... I DO carry all the 'etc.' with me, because they are important. -- ----- change 'netto' to 'net' to email me directly Eric Greenwell Washington State USA The German version is actually the one you should be carrying. If your manual is worded like mine it will state that if in doubt you should always refer to the German original which must be considered authoritative ![]() scale version of the German manual (presumably to make it easier to fit in the space over the spar) It's a mad world. |
#14
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Chip Fitzpatrick wrote:
Anyone remember the scenes in Those Magnificent Men in Their Flying machines with the German officer who can do anything? BTW, it is just out on DVD. Chip F I WANT it. Amazon here I come... |
#15
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Then they could not have been nicer. They arranged to pick up the bones (no
questions about it being totaled) and sent me a full check immediately. I had it insured for what it cost me, which of course was now underinsured I reminded them that the trailer was not insured by them and was not included. No problem. Same warning. Don't give the insurance company a chance to mail you. Ed Byars Ed, While you are patting yourself on your back for having *most* of the required paperwork on board (put a half of a gold star in your log book), you completely missed the big pictu you were UNDER INSURED! This could have led to a very distressing situation: an aircraft that is damaged, but repairable. The insurance company pays you the face value of the policy and takes possession of the "wreckage", repairs it and sells it for more than what they paid you and the repair shop combined. Think that this can't happen? Think again! Read your insurance contract- they have sole discression in this area. At the very least you need to be fully insured so you can replace your glider with something comparable. This is clearly an issue with the dramatic rise of the Euro relative to the dollar. Tom Seim Richland, Wa |
#16
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91.9 and 21.5 of US CFR may be helpful.
I don't have a terribly clear idea how this applies to experimentals, however, or even if 21.5 applies to experimentals. For regular ol' aircraft, IIRC before some date (maybe the '80s?) the POH (AFM?) was fine, then after that, one needed a manual with a serial number on it. If anyone wants to illuminate us on the differences between an AFM and a POH, you're smarter than me... In article 6vF9c.6663$GH3.1276@fed1read07, Michael McNulty wrote: "Marc Ramsey" wrote in message .com... Michael McNulty wrote: I am not aware that the flight manual is required to be in the aircraft. I believe that all of the information that I am required to have on board is contained on my placards (which are complete, including the weight and balance limits). The placards are what my operating limitations address, and as the aircraft is not certified, there is no such thing as an "approved flight manual". Check you operating limitations again. Every set I've had has included a clause that requires carrying the manufacturers flight manual, along with the placards. Marc I just double checked. My operating limitations do say that I must have "the placards, markings, etc. required by 91.9" , but there is not any specific reference to the flight manual. Since my aircraft is experimental, an "approved flight manual" does not exist, and I fully believe that my placards meet the requirements of 91.9 for "approved manual material, markings, and placards or any combination thereof". Again, the relevant document is the aircraft's particular operating limitations. My operating limitations do require a specific placard that states the weight and balance limits, Vne, and Va. (My operating limitations were issued in October 2001, and I believe that they follow the FAA inspectors handbook guidelines very closely.) I suppose I could carry a copy of the manual, but I think I'm on pretty solid ground without it. -- ------------+ Mark Boyd Avenal, California, USA |
#17
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Note that 14 CFR 91.9 (b) 1 and 2 only apply to airplanes and rotorcraft. A
glider is neither. Also 14 CFR 21.5 only applies to airplanes or rotorcraft. Only 14 CFR 91.9 (a) applies and, thus, it would appear that no flight manual is required to be carried in gliders unless the glider's Op Specs requires it to be carried. Allan "Mark James Boyd" wrote in message news:406c7444$1@darkstar... 91.9 and 21.5 of US CFR may be helpful. I don't have a terribly clear idea how this applies to experimentals, however, or even if 21.5 applies to experimentals. For regular ol' aircraft, IIRC before some date (maybe the '80s?) the POH (AFM?) was fine, then after that, one needed a manual with a serial number on it. If anyone wants to illuminate us on the differences between an AFM and a POH, you're smarter than me... |
#18
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Remember what's required to be on the aircraft?
The old ARROW, (now AROW): Airworthiness Certificate Registration Operating Limitations Weight & Balance The deleted "R" was for Radio station license. The operating limitations is where the ambiguity starts... If ALL the operating limitations from the manual are on the placards, you don't need the manual (AFM or POH) _IF_ you're operating part 91 (doesn't apply to part 121 or 135...but I haven't seen many "Charter Gliders"). If ALL the limits aren't posted, then you need to carry the manual. It's really cool being a 1-26 driver...a simple 12 page "leaflet" covers flight and maintenance manuals! I carry a copy of "the manual" in my 1-26... Do I ever pull it out in flight? Yeah, like you LS/ASW drivers do! Could it possibly make life a little less painful in the event of something terrifying such as a ramp check? Yup. So get Kinko's to condense 148 pages of manual into a completely un-readable (without a scanning electron microscope) document that helps you go above and beyond "legal." I wonder if someday haveing a CD-RoM of the manual will suffice...just imagine, once you've crashed and no longer "need" the manual, you can use it as a signal mirror! When I fly power craft, I PREFER to have a copy of "the manual," when flying Part 135 or 121, I'm required to. As was pointed out earlier in the thread, some manufacturers (and Type Certificate Data Sheets) specify that "the manual" is required on board. The more complex the airplane (e.g., 747), the more logical this need is. As a side note, I also prepare custom checklists, which is perfectly legal as long as each item in "the manual" checklist is on the home-brew checklist. For those that fly the Piper Seneca, you can understand that writing a home-brew checklist is a matter of sanity preservation because the Piper manual has most things completely out of order... -Pete |
#19
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Ed, no one answered your "ramp check" question.
If you are ever subject to a ramp check, you only need to "show" your pilot certificate, and medical if required for power aircraft. Show means that, show it to them, do not hand it to them. They can ask for but you do not have to provide them with the aircraft records nor look in the airplane other through the windows unless you let them. Offer to bring log books etc to their office at a later date. They cannot delay you. If you have just landed, you need to get things put away because you have an appointment to get to. If you are preparing to launch in the glider, your next in line and their interrupting the all important DI, an you are loosing the best part of the day. BT "Ed Byars" wrote in message ink.net... If I remember correctly (not too likely) the Manufacturer's Flight Manual says something like " this manual must be keep in aircraft". Also upon review I could find no specific Reg requiring aircraft log book to be in aircraft. It is however, the first thing the Feds will request. I know in power craft we never carry the paperwork/log briefcase in the airplane. We even kid with friends making them promise to burn all the records in case we crash. Since the glider has no recording tach or Hobbs it's been a habit of mine for decades to keep the log in the glider where I can keep it current after each flight. I would like to check my op. limitations but they went with the glider. Incidentally I used a small font, reducing Xerox, and both sides to condense the bulky multi page operating limitations to an almost illegible but a neat card or two for the cockpit. Same for most other paperwork. It's interesting to speculate if the placards referring to cockpit weights will suffice for the W&B requirement. Also I've heard that we are required only to "show" the Paperwork, not surrender it. Is this just for the license on a ramp check or for all "paperwork"? I sure didn't have any choice when they removed everything from my glider in my absence. I feel sure they were within their rights. Weren't they? Remember the FAA motto: We're not happy until you're not happy. I'm kidding.........some of my best friends are with the FAA. "Michael McNulty" wrote in message news:6vF9c.6663$GH3.1276@fed1read07... "Marc Ramsey" wrote in message . com... Michael McNulty wrote: I am not aware that the flight manual is required to be in the aircraft. I believe that all of the information that I am required to have on board is contained on my placards (which are complete, including the weight and balance limits). The placards are what my operating limitations address, and as the aircraft is not certified, there is no such thing as an "approved flight manual". Check you operating limitations again. Every set I've had has included a clause that requires carrying the manufacturers flight manual, along with the placards. Marc I just double checked. My operating limitations do say that I must have "the placards, markings, etc. required by 91.9" , but there is not any specific reference to the flight manual. Since my aircraft is experimental, an "approved flight manual" does not exist, and I fully believe that my placards meet the requirements of 91.9 for "approved manual material, markings, and placards or any combination thereof". Again, the relevant document is the aircraft's particular operating limitations. My operating limitations do require a specific placard that states the weight and balance limits, Vne, and Va. (My operating limitations were issued in October 2001, and I believe that they follow the FAA inspectors handbook guidelines very closely.) I suppose I could carry a copy of the manual, but I think I'm on pretty solid ground without it. |
#20
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In article ,
ADP wrote: Note that 14 CFR 91.9 (b) 1 and 2 only apply to airplanes and rotorcraft. A glider is neither. I disagree. 91.9(b)(2) covers a US registered civil aircraft for which an Airplane or Rotorcraft Flight manual is not required... This means my glider. In this case (still quoted from 91.9(b)(2) ) there must be "available in the aircraft a current approved Airplane or Rotorcraft Flight Manual" (obviously not) OR -----this is a big OR. It comes from the parallel sentence structure of the little "or" which is the fourth from last word in the remaining verbiage. "approved manual material, markings, and placards, or any combination thereof." From my reading, if it ain't an Airplane or Rotorcraft, this last sentence describes what must be available in the aircraft. Do the markings and placards give sufficient info to replace carrying the "manual material?" I dunno... Do I carry the manual material in all the gliders I personally fly? Yes I do. But they are really tiny manuals, so this presents no problems for me. Actually, it is nice to sometimes be on the grid and browsing the "manual material." Also 14 CFR 21.5 only applies to airplanes or rotorcraft. This may be true. I don't have a copy of the full 21.5. Dunno...I looked it up once but for airplanes, so I dunno... Only 14 CFR 91.9 (a) applies and, thus, it would appear that no flight manual is required to be carried in gliders unless the glider's Op Specs requires it to be carried. Again I disagree. I think combinations of markings, placards, and manual material are required by 91.9(b)(2). Allan "Mark James Boyd" wrote in message news:406c7444$1@darkstar... 91.9 and 21.5 of US CFR may be helpful. I don't have a terribly clear idea how this applies to experimentals, however, or even if 21.5 applies to experimentals. For regular ol' aircraft, IIRC before some date (maybe the '80s?) the POH (AFM?) was fine, then after that, one needed a manual with a serial number on it. If anyone wants to illuminate us on the differences between an AFM and a POH, you're smarter than me... -- ------------+ Mark Boyd Avenal, California, USA |
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