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ACL65PILOT, I beg to differ. I got the following information from another aviation website. Take a look (really interesting read):
Breathalyzer Accuracy - Page 1
Breathalyzer Accuracy - Facts & Info
Breathalyzer Accuracy
Bottom line. Be responsible.
Yeah, I wonder why...Amazing how the flying public cares about intoxicated pilots
I know for a fact that the ones used in DOT testing have to be calibrated. I am sure that they do the same over there. If the machine was not calibrated correctly then the person get off.
What do the Dutch JAR regs say?
Interesting. Why then is there so much controversy about the breathalyzers? Several doctors have told me that the only accurate measurement comes from a blood test. Don't know if you can refuse a breathalyzer test and request a blood test instead. That's what I would do.
So what happens here. Assuming the news reports are accurate and that he was above the limit - does the company deal with it internally or does the FAA step in?
.023 is 1 beer for a 160lb man. Burn off rate is approx.015 per hour.
What the hell kind of country arrests and fines you for that?
I believe the FAA limit is .04. However, if the FOM specifies lower than .023, than it is controlling document and may lead to certificate action.
You can beg to differ, but I know for a fact that the ones used in DOT testing have to be calibrated. I am sure that they do the same over there. If the machine was not calibrated correctly then the person get off.
You can refuse the breathalyzer