Over the years, I’ve spent way too much time as self-loading cargo on airliners. Regardless, I’m always curious about what’s going on in the front office but rarely get a clear glimpse. One exception is when some last-minute maintenance is performed or connection problems result in some passengers arriving late to the gate. Invariably, Captain Speaking will come on the PA and apologize for the delay, commenting that “we’ll be ready to go as soon as we get the final paperwork.” What is the captain talking about?
In the case of last-minute maintenance performed at the gate, the captain is referring to ensuring the logbooks are updated to record the work. These days, that’s done electronically and the maintenance logs are not carried aboard the airliner. If the paperwork problem is late-arriving passengers, the issue is getting an accurate head count, loading any checked baggage and then updating the airliner’s weight and balance data before closing the door and pushing back. Operations under FAR Part 121 are among the most structured the FAA allows, and the detailed documentation the agency requires likely would be daunting to a mere private pilot in a Skyhawk. But that Skyhawk is subject to some of the same FAA paperwork rules as the airliner. What are they?
