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FAA bans takeoffs with ‘polished frost’

By Janice Wood · December 1, 2009 ·

WASHINGTON, D.C. — The FAA now prohibits takeoffs with “polished frost” — frost buffed to make it smooth — on the wings, stabilizers and control surfaces of several classes of aircraft. The new rules are effective Jan. 30, 2010.

Frost can affect the aerodynamics of wings and control surfaces, and the safest action is to completely remove it, FAA officials said. Previous FAA guidance recommended removing all wing frost prior to takeoff, but allowed it to be polished smooth if the aircraft manufacturer’s recommended procedures were followed. But manufacturers never published standards of acceptable smoothness for polished frost, and the FAA has no data to determine exactly how to polish frost to satisfactory smoothness.

“The FAA has advised pilots not to take off with frost or ice contaminating their wings for years because it made good sense,” said FAA Administrator Randy Babbitt. “Now, it’s the law.”

The new rules include four alternatives to removing frost that operators may consider: Using wing covers to prevent frost accumulation on wings; waiting for frost to melt; storing the aircraft in a heated hangar; or deicing the wing surface.

The new rules also clarify that affected aircraft must have functioning deicing or anti-icing equipment for flights under Instrument Flight Rules into known or forecast light or moderate icing conditions, or under Visual Flight Rules into known light or moderate icing conditions.

For more information: FAA.gov

About Janice Wood

Janice Wood is editor of General Aviation News.

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