RobertGary1 Posted December 3, 2020 Report Posted December 3, 2020 (edited) On 12/14/2009 at 9:57 AM, mjc said: Apparently, this issue is not subject to the discretion of the examiner, as the FAA has issued an interpretation of the "dual controls" mandate. So I'd probably start by emailing the text from the following link to the examiner: http://www.aopa.org/whatsnew/regulatory/regdual.html If the examiner still refuses to allow the exam, I'd probably ask the local FSDO for the name of another nearby examiner that does abide by the FAA's interpretation. In any case, I agree with the others that adding dual brakes is cost-prohibitive for this use case. I think that’s a misunderstanding. Any examiner can refuse a ride just like any pic can refuse to fly a plane. Some examiners won’t do any checkrides for certain schools because they don’t like their maintenance. The faa rule only says examiners are allowed to give the ride without brakes. no need to call the fsdo. Just go to the website and select the next examiner down the list. Gone are the days the fsdo was involved in initial cfi dpe selection. Edited December 3, 2020 by RobertGary1 Quote
Brent Fowlds Posted September 18, 2021 Report Posted September 18, 2021 On 4/3/2013 at 12:40 PM, N601RX said: I put one on my 67 F last summer. Most of the time was spent forming, fitting and mounting the aluminum lines. I also have a extra set if anyone is interested. Do you still have the extra parts for co pilot brakes? Quote
Brent Fowlds Posted September 18, 2021 Report Posted September 18, 2021 On 4/3/2013 at 12:40 PM, N601RX said: I put one on my 67 F last summer. Most of the time was spent forming, fitting and mounting the aluminum lines. I also have a extra set if anyone is interested. Do you still have the extra set of parts as stated for the Mooney? Quote
M20F-1968 Posted September 18, 2021 Report Posted September 18, 2021 You may want to have co-pilot brakes in the long term. There is not much added weight. The work to install is not that much. I spoke with Bill Wheat when I added the hydraulic lines for mine. He said the best system is the one without the shuttle valve. I have drawings and installed them with DER approval. The right and left brakes are interconnected. The master brake cylinders I used were from a 1998 Ovation. They are the same on both sides. I got rid of the original parking brake and used the one from the Ovation which only pressurizes the lower part of the system closer to the main wheels. Depending upon how mechanical you are, it should not be much of a project if you were to measure, make up and bend the hydraulic lines. They will need to be flared and hand fitted. You should be able to work with an A&P on this. Bleeding the brakes can take some time. Brake pedals and parts have been available on e-bay. John Breda Quote
carusoam Posted September 18, 2021 Report Posted September 18, 2021 Welcome aboard Brent! Haven’t seen 601 in a couple of months… But, compared to this ancient thread you have revived… 601 might stop by later today…. He may have his email connected, and might see your question… Go MS! Best regards, -a- Quote
Recommended Posts
Join the conversation
You can post now and register later. If you have an account, sign in now to post with your account.