Pilot deviation


Pilot deviations are actions of a pilot that result in the violation of an air traffic regulation, often a failure to follow instructions from air traffic control.

Types

Pilot deviations can be split into ground- and airborne deviations.

Pilot deviation notification

A Brasher warning is a warning immediately issued to pilots by the air traffic controllers after a potential deviation by the latter occurs. It was named after Captain Jack Brasher, a former Republic Airlines pilot who was accused of deviating from an assigned altitude on August 13, 1985. Jack Brasher was only notified six months later that the Federal Aviation Administration had concerns over this incident and when he was interviewed, he stated that he had no recollection of what happened, given the amount of time passed after the event. Therefore, the FAA implemented the Brasher warning, or, as they refer it, the "Brasher Notification" or Pilot Deviation Notification.