Tony Fagan wrote:I can't see how such an absurd idea to do away with independent inspections ever came to pass.
Common sense surely must prevail. There were sound, valid reasons why independent inspections
were introduced. Nothing has changed since!
The reasons why it needs to be done, in my opinion. If we are doing away with this, whats next? The Proficiency test? Dont need that, its up to the individual to to fly safely, isnt it?stewart clifford wrote:I agree with Phil, far too often I've seen scrutineers be quite brutal with the models. I always make sure I'm with my models when they're checked. In the past I've seen aircraft trodden on and kicked and on one occasion Chris FW190 was put out as static before it was completed and when he came back to it it had passed scrutineering even though it had bits missing. As for pulling flying surfaces up and down whats that all about? only a complete nugget would do that to a servo and personally I won't allow it to be done to my models, it would be better to have the owner there with the radio switched on then they could show everything working. I check my models externally before and after every flight, I'm yet to see anyone else do that. If a scrutineer can easily pull out a flying ssurface I think it shows that the owner hasn't checked the model at all, so why are people like that even flying at shows? Perhaps when one takes their proficiency test their building, maintenance and storage methods should also be taken into consideration?
On the pro scrutineering side who will be there to stop some of these absolute heaps of krud appearing on the flightline?
Alan King wrote:I am going to be pedantic and explain how scrutineering should be done.
I personally have been involved with Motor X, rallying, Drag Racing, carting to name a few.
the scrutineer should always have someone from the team or the driver, rider, pilot etc available item is scrutineered, the intention of scrutineering is to ensure an extra set of Knowleagable eyes have examined the item being scrutinised, this means the scrutineer has to know his beans.
I have been involved with greenpower racing here in UK and the scrutineers I have met have been engineers not layman (who have no knowledge of the subject) this means they can be subjective and also make decisions based on prior understanding not a set of regulations only.
The above does not preclude anyone from being a scrutineer it just means the scrutineer must understand and know what he is talking about, we have lots of trusted people in the LMA we can use. I personally have seen scrutineering by persons less than able to the task and this is beyond dangerous, i have also had scrutineers who are so anal that an enema would have no effect on how they work.
the fact is besides all this hassle we need to have someone available to check things as when we are caught up in the excitement of the moment we can miss things, I have seen this in Drag racing where the scrutineer noticed a severely frayed parachute cable, we had spotted it but with the engine rebuild before the race it had been forgotten and even though wrtien on the service board it had been overlooked, a failure of a top fueler parachute could have meant a severe accident and possible death for the driver.
so the scrutineer must :
1. Know his subject.
2. Follow a set procedure.
3. Always scrutineer with pilot or member of team. ( certain questions need to be asked to ascertain if the pilot is aware of safety etc )
4. Be part of a solution not seen as part of a problem.
5. challange shortcomings.
6. Be respectfull but firm.
7. Be safety focused not show focused.
The scrutineer in racing saves lives, he helps find problems not only by seeing but through questioning, such as when last did you check bolts on the prop or engine mounting bolts. the simple fact is many models are lost through simple things hoing wrong ie something being overlooked and that is why the scrutineer is there no other reason.
Now based on your argument of scrutineering and possible legal cases then it means all crutineering must be stopped as legal issues could attach to the scrutineer, sorry i cannot buy into this, if the scrutineer is legally responsible then so is the organiser, the person owning the airfield. the CAA for giving an exemption certificate, the person checking the airframe to confirm the model is safe to fly and the list goes on, ultimately simple answer is keep the scrutineer just have a signed aknowledgement from the pilot that the final decision to fly is his, this will be the simplest safest way, take away the scrutineer and I am prepared to place a bet on the accident rate increasing.
We need to be checked, some may check themeselves but again the proof of reality shows no matter how well trained at a certain point people become lax and overlook safety, if they did not then we would have less "accidents" of all forms. I site the following well known example.
Pilot of a twin arrived at the airport with two friends, all other folk were deicing their A/C this gent decided to scrape the ice off with his credit card, he then climbed into the aircraft without doing a walk around and proceeded to start up and take off with his two friends, failing to carry out a run up or anything else, just after take off one engine cut and the plane rolled into the ground, all three died in the crash, cause was determined to have been water in the fuel, something he would have detected if he did a walk around.
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