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Flying
Handbook Menu > Ground
Operations > Visual
Inspection > Inside The Cockpit
The inspection should start with the cabin
door. If the door is hard to open or close, or if the carpeting
or seats are wet from a recent rain, there is a good chance
that the door, fuselage, or both are misaligned. This may be
a sign of structural damage. The windshield and side windows
should be examined for cracks and/or crazing. Crazing is the
first stage of delamination of the plastic. Crazing decreases
visibility, and a severely crazed window can result in near
zero visibility due to light refraction at certain angles to
the sun.

figure2-3. Inside the cockpit.
The pilot should check the seats, seat rails,
and seat belt attach points for wear, cracks, and serviceability.
The seat rail holes where the seat lock pins fit should.also
be inspected. The holes should be round and not oval. The pin
and seat rail grips should also be checked for wear and serviceability.

figure2-4. Fuel selector and primer.
Inside the cockpit, three key items to be
checked are: (1) battery and ignition switches—off, (2)
control column locks—removed, (3) landing gear control—
down and locked. [figure2-3] The fuel selectors should be checked
for proper operation in all positions—including the OFF
position. Stiff selectors, or ones where the tank position is
hard to find, are unacceptable. The primer should also be exercised.
The pilot should feel resistance when the primer is both pulled
out and pushed in. The primer should also lock securely. Faulty
primers can interfere with proper engine operation. [figure
2-4] The engine controls should also be manipulated by slowly
moving each through its full range to check for binding or stiffness.The
airspeed indicator should be properly marked, and the indicator
needle should read zero. If it does not, the instrument may
not be calibrated correctly. Similarly, the vertical speed indicator
(VSI) should also read zero when the airplane is on the ground.
If it does not, a small screwdriver can be used to zero the
instrument. The VSI is the only flight instrument that a pilot
has the prerogative to adjust. All others must be adjusted by
an FAA certificated repairman or mechanic. The magnetic compass
is a required instrument for both VFR and IFR flight. It must
be securely mounted, with a correction card in place. The instrument
face must be clear and the instrument case full of fluid. A
cloudy instrument face, bubbles in the fluid, or a partially
filled case renders the instrument unusable. [figure2-5]

figure2-5. Airspeed indicator, VSI,
and magnetic compass.
The gyro driven attitude indicator should
be checked before being powered. A white haze on the inside
of the glass face may be a sign that the seal has been breached,
allowing moisture and dirt to be sucked into the instrument.
The altimeter should be checked against the ramp or field elevation
after setting in the barometric pressure. If the variation between
the known field elevation and the altimeter indication is more
than 75 feet, its accuracy is questionable. The pilot should
turn on the battery master switch and make note of the fuel
quantity gauge indications for comparison with an actual visual
inspection of the fuel tanks during the exterior inspection

figure2-6. Wing and tail section inspection.
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