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Fri, Nov 03, 2006

SAFO Clarifies Frost 'Polishing' Procedure

Basically... Don't Do It, OK?

If you want to polish frost on your plane instead of removing it... the FAA has clarified its position on that procedure.

All new pilots learn contamination of any kind on a wing or control surface is hazardous, and that includes frost or ice. Many pilots may not know, however, that current FAA regulations allow pilots -- even part 135 operators -- to polish frost to a smooth surface prior to take off as an alternative to removing it.

The theory is the resulting smooth surface will not disturb airflow over the wings -- thus affecting lift -- like the rough texture of frost can.

A new Safety Alert For Operators (SAFO), however, says operators can't polish frost, unless an aircraft manufacturer has explicit procedures for doing so. (Incidentally... few manufacturers still recommend doing that; most say any foreign material on the wings should be removed completely prior to takeoff -- Ed.)

Usually, a SAFO is directed at commercial operators, and isn't mandatory. But the language in this one suggests a tweak in the regs may be on the horizon, as well.

After all... if you have time to polish the frost, you should have time to remove it.

FMI: Read The SAFO (.pdf)

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