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Old 04-20-2008 | 07:28 AM
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rwright142
 
Joined: Sep 2004
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From: Indianapolis, IN
Default RE: Pre-Flight Check

ORIGINAL: Nathan King

As an instructor I really emphasize the fact that pre-flight checks are not just something pilots do with new aircraft but are ongoing procedures that are followed throughout the life of the airplane. I once got a student irritated after I wouldn't take his airplane up until I metered the battery. He didn't want to, so I told him I absolutely wouldn't fly the airplane until I was sure beyond a doubt that it was airworthy. He reluctantly removed the wing (probably grumbling the whole time), and I checked it. Let's just say he ended up happy that I insisted on the check (it was well below nominal voltage). I took out a spare battery of mine and installed it so we could fly. The next week he admitted that he had plugged the charger into a socket that was controlled by a switch. The battery was only charged a couple of minutes until the light was turned off. The next morning he flipped the light back on and came in the room. It appeared that the charger had been on the whole night but hadn't. I may get an eye roll from time to time, but no student of mine is going to have his airplane crash under my watch because of something preventable like a battery or linkage. The moral of the story: just when you think everything is perfect, expect something to be out of place. Don't just look at everything but inspect it with a critical eye.
Nathan,
I have never seen someone take a stand like that and I applaud you for it.

I am one of those guys that hears snickers behind my back and has the eyes rolling at them, all because I take pre and postflighting too seriously. To me it is about safety first, then fun. I will spend a lot of time preflighting before EVERY flight, not just the first one of the day. I was once asked why I did that and I responded because I just did not have enough experience to know on which flight of the day I would have a failure and lose control. These planes can kill and I would feel awful if I could have avoided it by simply taking off the wing and looking inside.

I have been in clubs where some of the officers of the club will show a newby the field safety rules but yet they don't follow the rules themselves. The best you can hope for is that you pass this on to the next person and they keep it going.