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Flight school sued for $50,000,000

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Milkdud,

Sorry, really didn't mean to be argumentative.. I was actually just thinking we have managed to keep this thread relatively conversational instead of confrontational and I hope to continue that. Its that darn Italian in me that always wants it to be an arguement... :) You make some great points about what will the student think, I would like to hope that I can train my students to fly to minimums, but I do emphasize heavily that you never go below them, and I will not for one second hesitate at DH, but go full power and proceed to my alternate if there is no runway in sight. Your right in the end though, it is absolutely personal judgement, and every situation requires its own decision. While I trust in my own judgement and abilities I would like to think I know when to put myself in check too, and hopefully that combination will continue to keep me alive.

Irapilot. What I would do is trim for best glide, see if I can coax any power out of my engine or if it needs to be shutdown, declare an emergency, make a decision on if I can make it to airport and if not ask for radar vectors to some level of a less populated area if altitude permit. After that I'm going to set up for an emergency landing and I'm going to prepare myself for what I will do when I break out of the clouds. When I do I will look for in order, open fields, atheltic fields, lakes/ponds and lastly roads. I will expect to make a decision in my first 5 seconds out of the clouds and I will stick with what I choose and try and set it down. That is my plan. Obviously you are right that the PT-6 is a better more reliable engine, but my example of the Lances, Saratogas, and 210's, many of them on 135 certs with less than stellar maintenance is very apt. I will continue to fly single engine IFR because it is a necessary evil right now, and every flight I will hope for the best, and keep my fingers crossed for the day when I don't have to do it anymore.

cale
 
I remember this day because a soldier gave me his patch as he got off of our airplane. I held for about 10 minutes with isolated storms in the area, waiting for the visibility to improve to shoot the approach to 200 and 1/2. I think the crash must have occurred about 15-20 minutes after we departed KHPN. It was a crappy day for us and I would not want to be instructing in a c172 with a student pilot in that kind of Wx.
It is a sad situation.
 
Nolife said:
I also figured that they wouldn't learn much watching me fly the approach which at 200 & 1/2 I'd be doing. I'm not sure if I'd take an instrument student up in 200 & 1/2 unless they were very good. Not much room for error there. And flying the approach from the right seat would be annoying as well.

I think you hit the nail on the head, although I would think that flying the approach from the right seat (presumably without co-pilot instruments) would be more than an annoyance, particularly for such a low time CFI. At 900 hours, he probably only received his instrument rating a year ago, and how much time can he have actually manipulating the controls, let alone flying actual IMC.

I am not an instructor but I can't see any training benefit to what was being done -- except perhaps training of the CFI. Like others, my guess is that the school or CFI just didn't want the down time.

It is sad that it cost two people their lives.
 
cale42 said:
Milkdud,

While I certainly support every pilot having their own personal minimums, there is absolutely nothing wrong with taking a GA aircraft up in IFR minimums if the pilot is comfortable and trusts the airplane. I fly 172's when there is 200' ceilings, and I will continue to do so. The airplanes I fly are well equipped fully IFR airplanes with dual vacuum pumps and mostly with moving map GPS to enhance situational awareness and they are on a maintenance program I fully trust. If ceilings drop 1 foot as you mention that is why I have an alternate. I beleive any pilot who wants to do this for a living should be comfortable at IFR minimums. I have personally flown a number of flights where I never broke out on the practice approaches, you go missed and go try somewhere else.

The LLWS is a whole other situation that has to be separately addressed, but there are many pilots who fly a whole variety of GA aircraft right down to IFR minimums, nothing crazy about it.

All of that fancy equipment, but when the rubber meets the road, you still only have one "piston" engine and one alternator. Not a great combination. As for the argument about the Caravan or Pilatus, there are statistics somewhere where the PT-6 has had very, very few mechanical failures which led to inflight engine shut down. Now comparing this to piston engines, and reliability of the turbine far outweighs the piston. This is why operators have more flexibility in when operating in weather right at FAR minimums in a turbine engine. They have the odds on their side that the turbine infront of them will keep turnin'. Today's piston engines are reliable. However, turbine reliability is far greater.
 
groundpointsix said:
Nope. Only required to hold a 3rd class. As it was explained to me, as an instructor I'm being hired to teach, not to fly the airplane. In fact, if the student is capable of acting as PIC (not the case here) you don't even need a medical. Assuming the instructor was under 40, he's still got another 11 months on his medical before it expires.

So in this case, his medical was of no value for the purpose of flight instructing. He was required to act as PIC in this instruction. So for the purpse of the "commercial" flight and the "flight instruction," he was required to hold at a minimum a second class medical as per 61.23(a)(2).
 
I can see doing an IFR local flight for a student pilot but why an IFR X-Ctry.

Also, I would be curious as to what the forecast weather at the field was. If 200 and 1/2 was forecast in the main body I do not see how AF could have a defense.

I would not be "comfortable" flying a C172 down to 200 and 1/2 with me flying, let alone a student flying. Having more actual instrument time then this instructor has total time I cannot imagine this instructor being comfortable enough to allow the student to do the flying. What is the benefit to the student if they are not even allowed to do the flying.

When I was the manager of a flight school I found that instructors were always too eager to do approaches with the students. BAI is boring, the old pattern A pattern B stuff is boring but it is the foundation. Aside from using one to get back to the field from a lesson, approaches should be toward the end of the instrument program. The 3 hours for the private pilot should be used for BASIC ATTITUDE INSTRUMENT FLYING. Doing a 3 hour cross country does not do the student any good as most of it is S&L.

Later
 
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igneousy2 said:
Also, I would be curious as to what the forecast weather at the field was. If 200 and 1/2 was forecast in the main body I do not see how AF could have a defense.

I think a lot of people would like to know what the forecast was at the time.


igneousy2 said:
I cannot imagine this instructor being comfortable enough to allow the student to do the flying. What is the benefit to the student if they are not even allowed to do the flying.

Doing a 3 hour cross country does not do the student any good as most of it is S&L.

Later

I think that fundamentally, this is the basis of the suit.
 
Workin Stiff...

I beleive that even if you are are required to act as PIC during a flight that involves instruction a third class medical is still adequate. The FAR's specifically say you only need a third class medical to instruct. This includes instructing private students, where by default you have to act as PIC. So the same logic should transfer to a flight in actual that is for the purpose of instructing. Third class medical is adequate.

cale
 
Was this school one of the ones that have FAA approval to give a combined private pilot and instrument rating with one checkride?
 
cale42 said:
Workin Stiff...

I beleive that even if you are are required to act as PIC during a flight that involves instruction a third class medical is still adequate. The FAR's specifically say you only need a third class medical to instruct. This includes instructing private students, where by default you have to act as PIC. So the same logic should transfer to a flight in actual that is for the purpose of instructing. Third class medical is adequate.

cale

you need a second class medical to act as a commercial pilot tho, which if being an instructor, isn't that acting as a commercial pilot...
 
According to the 'new' FAA thinking, we should try to start our students out as a Comm/Instrument student and if they decide to only go for the private license, then so be it. I don't know if I agree with the thinking about trying to start a private pilot student as an Instrument student too. I think that I'd have no problem taking a student into the soup, but it would have to be well after some initial training. What happened to the idea of looking outside the aircraft? I was taught to look outside more often than looking in. It's frustrating to me that flight schools often have to pay for the problems caused by and overzealous flight instructor. I've seen it happen a lot. A good flight school should have a full set of minimums(usually higher than the FAA mins) and a good Chief Flight Instructor that watches his/her instructors and makes sure they follow these rules. HUMBLE OPINIONS ONLY!!!!
 

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