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#21
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![]() "Richard Kaplan" wrote in message om... | "C J Campbell" wrote in message ... | | Even charter operators will not get an MEL unless it is | absolutely essential to their operation. | | | Actually, almost all charter operators do have an MEL for their Part | 135 airplanes because without it you could not fly if ANYTHING were | inoperative, i.e. without an MEL you could not even fly day VFR in | severe clear with an inoperative pitot heater. We only have an MEL for the Aztec. We just don't fly the other planes with inoperative equipment. |
#23
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![]() "Barb" wrote in message ... | Where did you find the small plane exemption from the "no flight with inop | equip" rule? | I was thinking of part 91 flights. |
#24
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"C J Campbell" wrote in message
... "Barb" wrote in message ... | Where did you find the small plane exemption from the "no flight with inop | equip" rule? | I was thinking of part 91 flights. my understanding Although you do have to deactivate and placard the equipment, even if it isn't required for the flight in question. A post-it next to the switch will do for a placard. /my understanding Quite how you deactivate the equipment is an exercise for the reader, given that by definition it's already deactivated. Sometimes you can pull a circuit breaker, but how do you deactivate a faulty HI, for example? -- David Brooks |
#25
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![]() "David Brooks" wrote in message ... "C J Campbell" wrote in message ... "Barb" wrote in message ... | Where did you find the small plane exemption from the "no flight with inop | equip" rule? | I was thinking of part 91 flights. my understanding Although you do have to deactivate and placard the equipment, even if it isn't required for the flight in question. A post-it next to the switch will do for a placard. /my understanding Actually getting off my butt and looking it up, I see I have summarized 91.213(d) pretty well, but until yesterday I assumed there was no Master MEL for the typical small single-engine airplane (logic path goes through (d)(1)(i)). As CJ discovered there is a generic MMEL, the flow actually goes through (d)(1)(ii), but it then goes to the same place (d)2-4, if I have followed the and/or's and indentation right. Of course, you can't fly without equipment specifically required by the day/night vfr/ifr required instruments regulation. -- David Brooks |
#26
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"David Brooks" wrote
As CJ discovered there is a generic MMEL, I really don't think that CJ told us where to find that generic MMEL for small piston-engined aircraft. I'm still waiting for him to post a url for that MMEL. Bob Moore |
#27
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