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Learjet destroyed during engine runs?

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I was a taxi/run-up designee at SWA for 4 years and they would make us go to the sim once a year for a check out and everything they could throw at us. Myself I would take a mechanic to the sim before I would check him or her out and see where they stood and if it was something he should be doing. I have done a lot of high power runs on dc-10 and b-757,767 and 737-700 and the overall thing I think with mechanics is if they are trained to be professional they will be if not they should not do it bottom line.
 
I was a taxi/run-up designee at SWA for 4 years and they would make us go to the sim once a year for a check out and everything they could throw at us. Myself I would take a mechanic to the sim before I would check him or her out and see where they stood and if it was something he should be doing. I have done a lot of high power runs on dc-10 and b-757,767 and 737-700 and the overall thing I think with mechanics is if they are trained to be professional they will be if not they should not do it bottom line.


That sounds like a great idea
 
So a mistake is made and the answer is more laws? C'mon, MOST mechanics are as competent to run and taxi airplanes as MOST pilots are to fly them.

"MOST" are competent????? Thats just great, what about the incompetent ones????? Well, hopefully you get the incompetent ones, I don't want them. How do you know which mechanic is NOT competent? YUP...after he bends the airframe in a ditch like this Learjet did.

How do you know which mechanic is going to act quickly and appropriately when the brakes fail during an engine run-up? Do your mechanics get any training on how to stop a plane, emergency brake system, SOV's, reversers, etc...? Hell no..... Yeah, they know what they are and where they are...but they aren't like pilots in the proficiency department.

By your line of reasoning, only pilots should tow airplanes, too. Or service the lavs, or wash airplanes, etc. etc.

I can't tell you how stupid of a statement that is. Those are line personnel jobs that take place when an aircraft is "OFF", parked or totally powered down. Don't even need battery power for most of those ops. An aircraft can't go flying across an airfield out of control from line personnel and get totalled, or kill someone.

Afterall, no-one knows better than the pilots what all the little protuberneces are, tow limits, wingspan, how much bllue(green) juice will overflow the lav, blah blah blah.

Again, jobs for line service. They get training on all that stuff.

The line has to get drawn somewhere. Hire competent mechanics.

For the most part, yes, mechanics will do just fine with engine runs. Its the time when a plane gets destroyed where this becomes the topic of discussion. If its not your plane, who cares, right.

A smart company owner would have his pilots taking care of engine runs. If not for total safety...liability. If I was an insurance company, I wouldn't cover non-pilots taxiing a plane around and doing engine runs.

Or, like "SWA tech" said......give the mechanics specific recurrent training on everything they would need to know to avoid a catastrophy. Nobody with half a brain can argue that.

.
 
what about incompetent pilots? our group tears up airplanes also. :smash:

this was my main point. Fly91, first of all, you can use all the question marks you like. They're free so why stop at five? Don't kid yourself, about line service guys. Most really don't have nearly the "training" that you think they do. What happens when an airplane leaves the towbar? This happens far more regularly than airplanes shooting off in to ditches under their own power (and without the batteries even on). How are we supposed to handle this crisis? Emergency stimulus package for Line Service Training? Pilots supervising all movements of all aircraft anywhere anytime?

Reread the sentence that seemed to gripe you so badly (according the the question mark indications). Most piltos don't crash airplanes. Some do. Most mechanics don't foul up ground run ops. Some do. Airplanes break all the time in flight, adn I've even been known to call mechanics in flight to get their opinions. Sometimes their opinion helped steer my decision making process. Does that mean that an airplane should never run without a mechanic present?


I've seen airplanes with overflowed lavs because too much fluid was put in. By your line of reaoning there should be a pilot there supervising the lav service.

I've seen the tow limits of an aircraft exceeded, which led to a gear failure. By your line of reasoning there should be a pilot there supervising all towing.

I've seen airplanes crash. By your line of reasoning there should be a Fed there supervising all flight ops. Afterall, all humans can be counted on to make a mistake sooner or later. We ought to regulate them more, right?

My point is that just because you read about an incident on the internet does not mean that there is some out of control situation presenting itself to the world every day that (gasp!) requires regulation in order to keep us safe from mechanics on a (fender) bender.
 
Sounds kinda fishy, that or the techs didn't know what they were doing. If you lose power lever control over the engine (DEEC) you can always push the FIRE button which closes the fuel SOV. I've heard of power lever jams and DEEC malfunctions but never an inability to shut down the engine. Sounds like whatever happened they panicked and forgot about the buttons.

LR45 dont have DEEC
 
"MOST" are competent????? Thats just great, what about the incompetent ones????? Well, hopefully you get the incompetent ones, I don't want them. How do you know which mechanic is NOT competent? YUP...after he bends the airframe in a ditch like this Learjet did.

How do you know which mechanic is going to act quickly and appropriately when the brakes fail during an engine run-up? Do your mechanics get any training on how to stop a plane, emergency brake system, SOV's, reversers, etc...? Hell no..... Yeah, they know what they are and where they are...but they aren't like pilots in the proficiency department.

I can't tell you how stupid of a statement that is. Those are line personnel jobs that take place when an aircraft is "OFF", parked or totally powered down. Don't even need battery power for most of those ops. An aircraft can't go flying across an airfield out of control from line personnel and get totalled, or kill someone.


Again, jobs for line service. They get training on all that stuff.


For the most part, yes, mechanics will do just fine with engine runs. Its the time when a plane gets destroyed where this becomes the topic of discussion. If its not your plane, who cares, right.

A smart company owner would have his pilots taking care of engine runs. If not for total safety...liability. If I was an insurance company, I wouldn't cover non-pilots taxiing a plane around and doing engine runs.

Or, like "SWA tech" said......give the mechanics specific recurrent training on everything they would need to know to avoid a catastrophy. Nobody with half a brain can argue that.

.

And what about you? How do I know you are a competent pilot? Do I find out you are only incompetent after YOU, as the PILOT, CRASH?
 
LR45 dont have DEEC

yes they do :eek:

The 45's DEEC's act like FADEC, except it still has a throttle cable for Hydromechincal control back up, just like the other 731's. The DEEC's due more then the DEEC's on older generation 731's, but they are still DEEC's
 
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I thought about it but........

Then I read a thread here on the corporate board that said something like 90% of corporate airplanes have been rolled by pilots. I think I would rather take my chances with the once in a blue moon occurance of a mechanic screwing up a run up:nuts:

That's a joke y'all. I for one don't want to get my A$$ out of bed in the middle of the night to go do a maintenance runup (when does most maintenance occur? - middle of the night)

Most Mechanics (like Most Pilots) are competent and conscientious (then there are those that roll corporate jets). Do we have a few Bozo's among our ranks (uhhhh YES!). When we start making rules because of the lowest common denominator then I might as well have gone to work for the airlines.

If you make something idiot proof, someone will make a better idiot.:D
 
yes they do :eek:

The 45's DEEC's act like FADEC, except it still has a throttle cable for Hydromechincal control back up, just like the other 731's. The DEEC's due more then the DEEC's on older generation 731's, but they are still DEEC's


Well I'll say I have not flown a LR45 or LR40, so truth be told I don't really know 100%, but I thought they had FADEC with throttle detents.
 
Well I'll say I have not flown a LR45 or LR40, so truth be told I don't really know 100%, but I thought they had FADEC with throttle detents.

yes... the Lear 45 series does have detents for TO, MCT and MCR. That has nothing to do with FADEC. The "F" in FADEC stands for Full authority which the 45 series does not have. It has a mechanical backup. Small technical detail, but it is a difference.
 
yes... the Lear 45 series does have detents for TO, MCT and MCR. That has nothing to do with FADEC. The "F" in FADEC stands for Full authority which the 45 series does not have. It has a mechanical backup. Small technical detail, but it is a difference.

I yield to you because you have experience with the aircraft. So I don't doubt what you are saying to be true.

This is of course getting off topic from the original post, but I would be interested in a brief breakdown of how this pseudo fadec/deec works? The reason I ask, we had DEECs on the Westwind, but it was basically just full throttle and it would set your t/o power. Worked much much better than the EECs.

So I assume on the Lear 45 series, It is like having a 1 channel FADEC, but it's a DEEC because it has mechanical backup and not dual channel?

EDIT: Well I should say it has 1 channel electrical, and then mechanical backup. As where FADEC is dual channel electrical, no mechanical backup, and thus if both channels fail, no turbine turning ;)

So it's like a hybrid in a since. Would this be a proper way to describe it?

Thanks for the knowledge!
 
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