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Got a reference? I'm not reading that anywhere. | |||
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אַרְיֵה |
This section specifies "civil aircraft." Not sure how it applies to military aircraft on a ferry flight, which leads to more questions, like what about military aircraft with pure transport (not combat) roles. הרחפת שלי מלאה בצלופחים | |||
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I hate to see this for the pilot, he could have injuries that could prevent him from ever flying again, or not (Brian Shul), in any case a very traumatic event for him. We probably will never know the real cause, and I am all right with that, the less we tell about a weakness with a military aircraft the better. __________________________ Keep your rotor in the green The aircraft in trim Your time over target short Make it count | |||
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Member |
The pilot was a US Air Force pilot, not contractor. And it’s a bit premature to call this pilot error without knowing anything about what actually happened. | |||
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אַרְיֵה |
Question for current or former military military pilots (arabiancowboy, mojojojo, or others): When a military aircraft flight is not combat-related, for example a ferry flight like the one being discussed, do all FAR Part 91 requirements apply? Things like fuel requirements? הרחפת שלי מלאה בצלופחים | |||
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Member |
Typically no. Each service has its own regs on its aircraft operations. They may mirror or be similar to FARs but they are service air operations manuals. The Navy has NATOPs 3710 and the Coast Guard has Air Ops Manual 3710. They spell out weather and reserve fuel requirements for their operations. In the CG, at least when I was flying, we were still under the DOT so we always tried to follow all FARs that weren't in contradiction to our Ops Manual 3710, but we weren't technically operating under an FAA license, we were flying under the authority of the Coast Guard. I'm sure that the Air Force and Army have similar controlling directives for their aircraft operations as well. That would dictate fuel reserve and weather minima requirements for their flights and missions. | |||
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Thank you Very little |
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The USAF follows a rule book known as the 11-202v3 for fuel type questions, although it can be further limited by the aircraft specific regulation (known as 11-MDSv3, where MDS equals the actual aircraft name). The 202 has a little blurb on the opening title page that says (I’m paraphrasing) “follow these rules but if not addresses, follow applicable FAR/AIM guidance.” All that to say military fuel numbers usually make sense but individual pilots are given a lot of agency to make logical decisions (at least in my community). I’m flying 121 now that I’ve retired and the company is always trying to fly with minimum fuel needed. In the military I could just throw on whatever extra gas I wanted without asking anyone’s permission. I only ran out of fuel once, haha, but it couldn’t be helped. | |||
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