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#1
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Did I read, or did I imagine it, that here in the US when a glider is
being towed, the tow pilot is the Pilot In Command of that combination and as such, is the final authority of that flight? Are there any FARs to support my curiosity? Thanks, Bob |
#2
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Common sense; he has the fan and everything goes where
he points it. You have three options --- accept it, request a change, release. At 14:54 06 September 2006, Bob wrote: Did I read, or did I imagine it, that here in the US when a glider is being towed, the tow pilot is the Pilot In Command of that combination and as such, is the final authority of that flight? Are there any FARs to support my curiosity? Thanks, Bob |
#3
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Since when has common sense and FARs had anything to do with each other
;) (Just kidding of course!) Nyal Williams wrote: Common sense; he has the fan and everything goes where he points it. You have three options --- accept it, request a change, release. At 14:54 06 September 2006, Bob wrote: Did I read, or did I imagine it, that here in the US when a glider is being towed, the tow pilot is the Pilot In Command of that combination and as such, is the final authority of that flight? Are there any FARs to support my curiosity? Thanks, Bob |
#4
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Since when has common sense and FARs had anything to do with each other
;) (Just kidding of course!) Nyal Williams wrote: Common sense; he has the fan and everything goes where he points it. You have three options --- accept it, request a change, release. At 14:54 06 September 2006, Bob wrote: Did I read, or did I imagine it, that here in the US when a glider is being towed, the tow pilot is the Pilot In Command of that combination and as such, is the final authority of that flight? Are there any FARs to support my curiosity? Thanks, Bob |
#5
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![]() Bob wrote: Did I read, or did I imagine it, that here in the US when a glider is being towed, the tow pilot is the Pilot In Command of that combination and as such, is the final authority of that flight? Are there any FARs to support my curiosity? Thanks, Bob When I'm at the front of the rope I'm PIC of the tug. When I'm at the back of the rope I'm PIC of the glider. I don't recall ever hearing of a pilot in command of the combination. There is a (hopefully) brief exposure where the glider pilot has to accept whatever the tug does but for most of the flight the glider pilot can end the arrangement at will. Andy |
#6
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The Tow pilot may be "Flight Lead", but #2 is able to terminate the
formation at any time at his discretion. I know of no FARs that determine responsibility other than 91.111 that I am aware of. And that simply states you cannot fly in formation without the permission and knowledge of every Pilot in the formation. BT "Bob" wrote in message oups.com... Did I read, or did I imagine it, that here in the US when a glider is being towed, the tow pilot is the Pilot In Command of that combination and as such, is the final authority of that flight? Are there any FARs to support my curiosity? Thanks, Bob |
#7
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The tow pilot is definitely not the PIC of the combination.
I have flown gliders for hire at many airshows with a private-rated tow pilot. We get ramp checked at almost every show, and the FAA has never questioned it. At 23:48 06 September 2006, Btiz wrote: The Tow pilot may be 'Flight Lead', but #2 is able to terminate the formation at any time at his discretion. I know of no FARs that determine responsibility other than 91.111 that I am aware of. And that simply states you cannot fly in formation without the permission and knowledge of every Pilot in the formation. BT 'Bob' wrote in message roups.com... Did I read, or did I imagine it, that here in the US when a glider is being towed, the tow pilot is the Pilot In Command of that combination and as such, is the final authority of that flight? Are there any FARs to support my curiosity? Thanks, Bob |
#8
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![]() T o d d P a t t i s t wrote: As to flying gliders for hire with a private rated towpilot - the FARs have changed so that a towpilot is exempted from the compensation prohibitions in 61.113(a). The FAA should have no problems with that scenario. Insurance, however, could be another matter. Did the regulations, or the FAA interpretation of them, really change or is the SSA private rated tow pilot exemption letter still in effect? thanks Andy |
#9
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Along the same topic, is aerotow considered formation flying? If so,
what about the restriction about formation flying with paying passengers onboard? I think there is an FAR about that, but I'll leave it to students of the FARs to do the research... Kirk 66 |
#10
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A little common sense needs to be applied. The FARs obviously anticipate
commercial glider operations, as they specifically provide for a Commercial Glider pilot rating. Aero Tow is a necessary component of such an operation, so even if the technical language might inadvertently prohibit this, no court is going to hold that this is the intent of the rule. Mike Schumann "kirk.stant" wrote in message ups.com... Along the same topic, is aerotow considered formation flying? If so, what about the restriction about formation flying with paying passengers onboard? I think there is an FAR about that, but I'll leave it to students of the FARs to do the research... Kirk 66 |
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