![]() |
If this is your first visit, be sure to check out the FAQ by clicking the link above. You may have to register before you can post: click the register link above to proceed. To start viewing messages, select the forum that you want to visit from the selection below. |
|
|
Thread Tools | Display Modes |
#31
|
|||
|
|||
![]()
On Mon, 29 Mar 2004 02:48:25 GMT, "Mike Rapoport"
wrote: I agree that there are infant mortality failures that can't be predicted and the manufacturer is responsible for those. The owners could have replace the alternator the day before but didn't. They are the ones making the maitenance decisions so they need to live with the consequences. This is where I must have missed something in the original poster's set of facts. If the owners are doing minimally the FAA required maintenance on the aircraft and the alternator was showing no sign of problems when the pilot took off with it, how is the failure automatically a result of the owner's negligence, which appears to be your position? Are you somehow going to know to replace an apparently perfectly good alternator the day before it shows signs of problems and subsequently breaks down? There is no indication here that the alternator was squawked prior to this flight. There is nothing in the record that shows whether or not at the onset of the flight there was an alternator light on in the aircraft, or whether or not the voltmeter was showing normal things during the runup checks. I assume that the pilot wouldn't take the aircraft out if it the light was on or the voltmeter was showing wrong, right? It would not be airworthy. So, are you expecting the owners to call Ms. Cleo and find out it's going to break and then arrange to have it replaced before the pilot picked up the aircraft? Until something is uncovered during maintenance (there is no mention of lax maintenance here) or during runup and then squawked (at which point the flight should not have left the originating airport) the owner has no way of knowing to replace something. I include in routine maintenance those things with wear-lives that have listed hours-to-replace/rebuild even though they might not be showing anything wrong at the time they're replaced/rebuilt. I'm just saying that if the owners had deferred fixing a known issue with the alternator then yes, definitely negligence and not only their issue, but they should be picking up 100% of all costs including food, lodging, and rental cars - but if they did the required maintenance, with no known issues deferred (and there is no evidence in this set of facts to contend otherwise), I am having problems seeing how anyone could contrive owner negligence into this scenario. Mike MU-2 "Peter Clark" wrote in message .. . On Sat, 27 Mar 2004 23:33:45 GMT, "Mike Rapoport" wrote: I guess that I see it differently. The owners are responsible for maitenance and they should be responsible when lack of maitenance causes a problem. It is their call whether to replace things to insure better reliability. Maybe I missed it but who said that the owners shirked any required maintenance, or were lax in their maintenance here? Things break. I lost an alternator control unit in a 2003 Skyhawk SP which was delivered in December and only had 75 hours total time. How could that possibly be due to bad/non maintenance? |
Thread Tools | |
Display Modes | |
|
|
![]() |
||||
Thread | Thread Starter | Forum | Replies | Last Post |
Northern NJ Flying Club Accepting New Members | Andrew Gideon | Aviation Marketplace | 1 | June 12th 04 03:03 AM |
Northern NJ Flying Club Accepting New Members | Andrew Gideon | General Aviation | 0 | June 12th 04 02:14 AM |
Ultralight Club Bylaws - Warning Long Post | MrHabilis | Home Built | 0 | June 11th 04 05:07 PM |
Aviation Conspiracy: Bush Backs Down On Tower Privatization Issue!!! | Bill Mulcahy | General Aviation | 3 | October 1st 03 05:39 AM |
September issue of Afterburner now on line | Otis Willie | Military Aviation | 0 | September 9th 03 09:13 PM |