No questions.. you just love to think you are smarter than everybody else. Your job, your career.. I could care less. But for those reading this that think you have a clue, take it from somebody that knows a thing or two about union members, slow downs and how pilots set themselves up for failure of a union cause that has no impact on the outcome of a CBA. Following fischman will do nothing but get you in trouble. Following my advice could, oh I don't know, SAVE SOMEONE'S LIFE.
fischman, it is broken when the mechanic says it's broken, not you. WRONG AGAIN. (You really make it too easy). It is broken when I say it's broken.
All your job to do is point it out. If he doesn't agree, YOU have no recourse. Yes I do. I can write it up again. And again. And again, until it is repaired to MY satisfaction. I am the PILOT IN COMMAND, and I have the FINAL AUTHORITY as to the safe OPERATION of the aircraft. At that point management makes the call, not you. Please educate yourself on the regulations. 91.3 was written in 1964 and it hasn't been changed since then. I'm surprised you never heard of it? If you choose to disagree with the mechanic, well.. it's your job. No. It's my RESPONSIBILITY to speak up if I see something fishy going on. My passengers put their lives in my hand. My wife and kids depend on me coming home. I will do ANYTHING and EVERYTHING in my power to see that is EXACTLY what happens. Mechanics tend to know more about mechanical items than pilots do. "Tend" is the key word there. That's why their signature can make an airplane airworthy and yours can only break it.
The regs are on the industry side, not yours. Sorry, after this display of yours, I will say you don't have a CLUE about what the regs say.
You don't determine airworthiness, the mechanic does. I guess I don't need to preflight then? That will save TONS of time. Cool! Your job is preflight planning (and inspection) and the operation of the aircraft. I have yet to see a pilot sign off an airplane in 135 that he is going to fly.
If you determine that an item is not airworthy and the mechanic says it is. You lose the argument every time. I haven't lost one yet. And I've had them.
I still think that you need to write up more airplanes, keep them outliers going! I will! If an airplane requires attention I WILL write it up, and I PROMISE you that I won't fly it until I deem it airworthy.