Bonanzaman,
I'm just telling you what you may find if this comes up with the FAA. The FAA says a pilot can R and R small parts not requiring complex operations to complete.
Here's a good PP program on preventive maintenance:
http://www.faa.gov/about/office_org/fie ... 34,1,Slide 1
The point you guys are failing to recognize is the "diversity of opinion" on what constitutes a "complex operation" within the FAA.
You can also get into nasty little loops: removal of a piece of installed equipment (even 8 pounds is considered important) requires a revision of the basic W & B. Pilots aren't permitted to create and sign such a document. So, is it the removal of the seat that needs a mechanic's signature, or the W & B, or both? Who knows, and the problem I keep pointing out is that you guys keep looking for logic in the FAA's interpretation of the FAR's.
The other point that you really need to consider is that there is a LARGE body of information contained in FAA General Counsel interpretations, NTSB findings, Administrative Law Judge determinations, etc, which further interpret the FARs themselves. So, reading the FAR's and interpreting them in your own context, may or may not work, and the FAA person who you think is "interpreting" an FAR just flat wrong, may in fact be basing his or her interpretation on a decision by an administrative law judge or a Chief Legal Cousel's interpretation.
A really good resource for some of this stuff is a book that Jeppesen publishes, called "The Federal Aviation Regulations Explained". It contains a lot of that huge body of interpretative law and many of the decisions.
Here's an example: I am training a private pilot towards a complex aircraft endorsement (or tailwheel endorsement, etc). That person is rated for a single engine land aircraft, but does not possess an endorsement for the complex aircraft, and no, he didn't log time before 199whatever in a complex aircraft. So, he has to have an endorsement to serve as PIC in this aircraft, right?
Wrong. All the flight time that this person performs as the sole manipulator of the controls of this complex aircraft while I am training him prior to performing the endorsement, he MAY LOG as PIC time. That is based on an FAA Chief Legal COunsel's determination. The theory being, logging time as PIC is permitted by pilots if they are rated for the aircraft, which is a category and class issue, not an endorsement thing.
So, they could not serve as PIC in solo flight, because they aren't endorsed to fly the airplane. But, they can log PIC time if accompanied by an instructor who is appropriately endorsed.
Find THAT one in the FAR itself, folks.......
Oh, yeah--and I've won two lunches on that one. Thanks, Jeppesen.
MTV
MTV