Chapter 6. EMERGENCY PROCEDURES
Section 1. GENERAL
6-1-1. Pilot Responsibility and Authority
a. The pilot in command of an aircraft is directly responsible for
and is the final authority as to the operation of that aircraft. In an emergency requiring
immediate action, the pilot in command may deviate from any rule in 14 CFR Part 91,
Subpart A, General, and Subpart B, Flight Rules, to the extent required to meet that
emergency.
REFERENCE-
14 CFR Section 91.3(b).
b. If the emergency authority of 14 CFR Section 91.3(b) is used to
deviate from the provisions of an ATC clearance, the pilot in command must notify ATC as
soon as possible and obtain an amended clearance.
c. Unless deviation is necessary under the emergency authority of
14 CFR Section 91.3, pilots of IFR flights experiencing two-way radio communications
failure are expected to adhere to the procedures prescribed under "IFR operations,
two-way radio communications failure."
REFERENCE-
14 CFR Section 91.185.
6-1-2. Emergency Condition- Request Assistance
Immediately
a. An emergency can be either a distress or urgency
condition as defined in the Pilot/Controller Glossary.
Pilots do not hesitate to declare an emergency when they are faced with distress
conditions such as fire, mechanical failure, or structural damage. However, some are
reluctant to report an urgency condition when they encounter situations which may
not be immediately perilous, but are potentially catastrophic. An aircraft is in at least
an urgency condition the moment the pilot becomes doubtful about position, fuel
endurance, weather, or any other condition that could adversely affect flight safety. This
is the time to ask for help, not after the situation has developed into a distress
condition.
b. Pilots who become apprehensive for their safety for any reason
should request assistance immediately. Ready and willing help is available in the
form of radio, radar, direction finding stations and other aircraft. Delay has caused
accidents and cost lives. Safety is not a luxury! Take action!
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