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![]() One of our club aircraft was recently on an IFR flight plan in VMC. The instrument student and his instructor noted that the DG was precessing excessively. They eventually canceled the flight plan and returned to their point of origin VFR. In canceling with ATC, they mentioned something about the DG having a problem. Later that day, the club received a call from the FSDO about the "vacuum failure" experienced by one of our aircraft. I've since chatted with the [nice] fellow from the FSDO myself (as one of the people involved in aircraft maintenance in the club). He explained that this was a part of a long-standing policy. Equipment failures that are reported to ATC are reported by ATC to the local FSDO. The FSDO checks into this, confirming that the problem was "resolved" by a mechanic before the aircraft flies again. The example he used was that of an RG with a flickering gear light. Assume the pilot reports the light to the tower. Further assume that the landing is uneventful (ie. the gear holds) and the flickering stops after landing. In this case, the FSDO is going to check that the aircraft received maintenance before it was flown again. I asked about the case where the above landing occurred at a field w/o services. He said that a mechanic should be brought in before the plane is flown to confirm that the gear is down and locked. There was a significant level of ambiguity in what I was told. He mentioned several times in the explanation that part of the trigger in the case of our aircraft was cancellation of the flight plan. I pointed out that I'd canceled IFR flight plans plenty of times. He then said that the difference was that my cancellations were typically when starting a visual approach to my intended airport, and the event under discussion involved an airplane not reaching its original destination. I pointed out that, once I was VFR, nobody knows where I land. He agreed with a little confusion. I know that the FAA has an interest in assuring that aircraft with problems are repaired. So do pilots. But I have never heard of this before. I wonder how well this long-standing policy handles subtleties like a VFR flight in an aircraft with a too-quickly precessing DG. And what are the possible sanctions? I was a little afraid to ask about that last point laugh. Is anyone familiar with this policy? I'd love to see some of the gaps filled in. Thanks... Andrew http://flyingclub.org/ |
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