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#1
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I was holding at a taxiway intersection for a flight school plane today.
The 152 hesitated and then started to turn right towards me. The tower called up and said "# # X, that's a LEFT turn." "We're having some trouble with our left brake so we're going to do a 360 around to the right." Right, I thought, a 180 back to the FBO you mean. Nope they went all the way around (270 actually) , down to the run up area, and went flying. I know they can coast to a stop on our long class C runways and I'm sure the instructor didn't want to cancel the lesson but. They might not be able to stop on a short runway if they had to divert in an emergency. The plane wasn't legal. The insurance probably was invalid because the plane wasn't airworthy. Is this what they are teaching students these days? -- Roger Long |
#2
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The plane wasn't legal.
Seems open to debate. Of course, you know how the NTSB report would look.... They might not be able to stop on a short runway if they had to divert in an emergency. You can always come up with a scenario in a certain decision could lead to catastrophe. Is this what they are teaching students these days? Not a big deal, IMO. Lots of instructors out there flying from the right seat in Pipers without any brakes on their side, though they do have the hand brake available. If you land slow, as you ought to, then you shouldn't need a long Class C runway to come to a stop. |
#3
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Nothing wrong with flying a plane without brakes if that's the way it is
described on the type certificate. If it was certified with brakes and they aren't working, it isn't in compliance with the certificate and isn't airworthy. -- Roger Long |
#4
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If it was certified with brakes and they aren't working, it isn't in
compliance with the certificate and isn't airworthy. The question is whether the airworthiness regulations *require* brakes. If not, then you could placard the brakes inop. Still, there's a slipperly slope between brakes not working, and having degraded braking performance. |
#5
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![]() I was holding at a taxiway intersection for a flight school plane today. The 152 hesitated and then started to turn right towards me. The tower called up and said "# # X, that's a LEFT turn." "We're having some trouble with our left brake so we're going to do a 360 around to the right." Perhaps the instructor is fabricating a reason for his student's erroneous maneuver? I know it would be a first and everything, but maybe? ![]() |
#6
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![]() "John Harlow" wrote in message ... I was holding at a taxiway intersection for a flight school plane today. The 152 hesitated and then started to turn right towards me. The tower called up and said "# # X, that's a LEFT turn." "We're having some trouble with our left brake so we're going to do a 360 around to the right." Perhaps the instructor is fabricating a reason for his student's erroneous maneuver? I know it would be a first and everything, but maybe? ![]() That was exactly my thought. Either the student or the CFI goofed ( maybe it was a very new student, and the CFI covered for him.) Or not, but the only reason I can think that a brake problem would cause that is if it (the brake)was stuck, since needing differential braking to taxi a 152 is odd. A stuck brake pedal would make any sane CFI not risk a take off. Stranger things have happened I suppose though. |
#7
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![]() "Dan Moos" wrote in message ... Or not, but the only reason I can think that a brake problem would cause that is if it (the brake)was stuck, since needing differential braking to taxi a 152 is odd. A stuck brake pedal would make any sane CFI not risk a take off. Stranger things have happened I suppose though. I've had brakes on the 152 stick after screwing with the parking break knob (which you are best advised not to monkey with). Perhaps the instructor was just trying to clear the active taxiway and unjammed it in the run-up block where he'd be out of the way. Another failure (and I have this on the Navion because my toe brake conversion uses Cessna rudder pedals), is that the hole in the tab where the brake cylinder attaches wallows out and may eventually snap. At that point the brake on that side gets to be intermittant as the thing engages and disengages the end of the cylinder). Fortuantely, brakes in the Navion are largely redundant and I woiuld have never put the toe brake conversion in (it was already there). I've flown them fine with just the hand brake. Absent understanding what he meant by "trouble with the left brake" you can't really tell. |
#8
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Yesterday, I went to AOO Altoona, Pa and ran into my friend, in the
plane that he loaned to me for my training. He was just getting there as was I and he told me that he had no left brake. we check it out and found a leak, naturally where we couldn't get to it easily. I left for Lost Acres (8PN0) before him, and got there in time to see a new pilot in the area do a go-round. He was way too fast and was going to touch down way to far down the 1800' runway. Two of us landed, and then he came back, he slid off the end of the runway, just barely, shopped a corn stock or two. We ran out and pushed the plane back, and then I saw my friend with the plane with no left brake entering the pattern. We told the "corn farmer" we would push his plane aside and watch the landing since he wasn't able to use much braking at all. He used just slightly more than half the runway, and taxied off to park. The poor guy is taking all kinds of comments after that one. The owner told him he needed to get a 4 blade prop, so it could do a better job on the corn. The other guy wasn't too bothered, he flew the plane a few hundred miles today and got the parts he needed while he was out. The corn plane was a 152, the brakeless one was a 150. Had to share.... Wayne They might not be able to stop on a short runway if they had to divert in an emergency. The plane wasn't legal. The insurance probably was invalid because the plane wasn't airworthy. |
#9
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"Roger Long" om wrote in message ...
I was holding at a taxiway intersection for a flight school plane today. The 152 hesitated and then started to turn right towards me. The tower called up and said "# # X, that's a LEFT turn." "We're having some trouble with our left brake so we're going to do a 360 around to the right." Since when does a C152 need to be steered with the brakes? If they meant, the left brake was stuck and not releasing, heh, well, I've seen a plane lose a tire on roll-out because the brake wouldn't release. The pilot was on-the-ball and the plane stayed on the runway, but it sounds a bit much to expect of a student pilot. Cheers, Sydney |
#10
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On 17 Sep 2003, Snowbird wrote:
Since when does a C152 need to be steered with the brakes? I keep reading this and wonder how many people here actually fly these things. It's common at small airports to be faced with a turn that can't be made with nosewheel steering alone, and you need to use differential braking. It's not always poor planning, sometimes it just works out that way. -- ------------------------------------------------------------------ Say NO to useless over-quoting! Just quote a few lines to get the point across, not the whole goddamn thing, OK? Thanks! :-) ------------------------------------------------------------------ |
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