nosehair
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- Joined
- Sep 22, 2003
- Posts
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'nuff saidSctt@NJA said:(well, ok, most likely anyway, in my opinion ect ect)
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'nuff saidSctt@NJA said:(well, ok, most likely anyway, in my opinion ect ect)
Ummmm yeah, ask Bob Hoover if it's might happen, or Bill Bainbridge, or how about that guy who crashed a Citation in Missouri who had been subject to such continuous, relentless ongoing harrasment by the FAA that the NTSB actually listed it as a contributing factor in the accident. It does happen. It shouldn't, but it does. If you don't think it does, you're ridiculously naive.Sctt@NJA said:As far as being afraid of the FAA... If you are acting within the law their is no need to worry about a fanatical inspector coming around with some twisted interpretation who may be intent on busting you. First of all it isn't going to happen.
Uhhh, yeah, tell him to get lost, yeah that will work. Too bad Hoover didn't think of that, that would have been so helpful. Like I said before, if *does* happen, and if it does, you aren't just going to duck out of it on your own. You especially aren't going to duck out of it by telling the inspector to "get lost" Recall that Hoover had the full support of the AOPA legal department *and* F. Lee Bailey, and he was still railroaded. In the end, he prevailed, but it cost him a lot of time (years) and money. So even if you do win, you still lose.Sctt@NJA said:Secondly in this case you would win very easily and you wouldn't need a lawyer. Just hold your ground, tell him to get lost, and thats the end of it. (well, ok, most likely anyway, in my opinion ect ect)
You're right, it can work - I've seen it too, but it's the exception rather than the rule. Telling a Fed to "bugger off" makes about as much sense as telling donut jokes to a cop as he's writing you up. Right or wrong, you're the one that's going to have to defend yourself against the inspector's opinion. If they decide to push the matter they'll have the full weight of the Department of Justice to back them up. How thick is your wallet?Sctt@NJA said:It has worked. I have seen it.
If one understands the administrative process, one never approaches the FSDO with a question, as one should not be so ignorant as to believe the FSDO can provide it. The FSDO doesn't have the authority to provide more than an opinion.An individual inspector does not have the full weight of the FAA behind them. You know what they say; "ask ten faa guys at FSDO get 10 different answers"
As for logging of flight time, the poster of this thread stipulated that the recipient was receiving instruction for personal purposes. If the duration of the flight exceeded eight hours, one need only show eight hours of instruction, or provide only eight hours. Chances are that little instruction was going on for much of those eight hours; one could likely show far less instruction and adequately represent the work performed.
Does how many hours he was paid for have any bearing on this conversation? i.e. Paid for 8.5 hrs. = 8.5 hours instruction reguardless of what he puts in his logbook.