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#1
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![]() is this your plane or hired? either way you should know if there is a fire extinguisher on board and if there is....where it is. the 150 i fly will start with 1 prime on a hot day or none at all if it has been flown within the past hour. on a cold day 2-3 primes is enough. good job on not freaking out though and staying on the ground! -- kat ------------------------------------------------------------------------ Posted via OziPilots Online [ http://www.OziPilotsOnline.com.au ] - A website for Australian Pilots regardless of when, why, or what they fly - |
#2
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My O-200 starts on a half prime on cold days. According to the book the
prop should be turning when the primer is pushed in. They prime just above the carb venturi. Pumping 3 to 4 shots without having the engine turning is asking for trouble. Fuel dribbles out the carb into the airbox and the cowl. One backfire and the entire engine compartment can be on fire. "kat" wrote in message ... is this your plane or hired? either way you should know if there is a fire extinguisher on board and if there is....where it is. the 150 i fly will start with 1 prime on a hot day or none at all if it has been flown within the past hour. on a cold day 2-3 primes is enough. good job on not freaking out though and staying on the ground! -- kat ------------------------------------------------------------------------ Posted via OziPilots Online [ http://www.OziPilotsOnline.com.au ] - A website for Australian Pilots regardless of when, why, or what they fly - |
#3
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Canadian aircraft are required, by law, to carry fire extinguishers. I
checked the US FARs but couldn't see that an extinguisher is required. However, a $30 extinguisher could save your life, not to mention the airplane. It's one of those things that many pilots don't worry about until they need it, and then the cost of the item seems small indeed. (Another example: a functioning ELT when the search planes are passing by, and you realize that you've bought the farm because you didn't bother keeping up the maintenance on it. Or it wasn't switched on to "arm;" again, due to lousy maintenance. It has happened numerous times up here.) As for engine fires, the POH has all the info on such emergencies. In Canada, a pilot is required at test time to know that book thoroughly. It could save his life if he had an inflight fire, an electrical fire or failure, and so on. Early POH's had no or very little info on emergency procedures, until manufacturers started getting sued half to death over people that died because they did the wrong things. Now, with most airplanes built since the mid-70s, there isn't any excuse not to have the info, except maybe not living long enough to read the whole thing :-) Dan |
#4
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![]() Actually a cheap fire extinguisher will probably destroy your airplane. The dry chemical is extremely corrosive and insurance companies will total the plane rather than pay big bucks attempting to have it removed "Dan Thomas" wrote in message om... Canadian aircraft are required, by law, to carry fire extinguishers. I checked the US FARs but couldn't see that an extinguisher is required. However, a $30 extinguisher could save your life, not to mention the airplane. It's one of those things that many pilots don't worry about until they need it, and then the cost of the item seems small indeed. (Another example: a functioning ELT when the search planes are passing by, and you realize that you've bought the farm because you didn't bother keeping up the maintenance on it. Or it wasn't switched on to "arm;" again, due to lousy maintenance. It has happened numerous times up here.) As for engine fires, the POH has all the info on such emergencies. In Canada, a pilot is required at test time to know that book thoroughly. It could save his life if he had an inflight fire, an electrical fire or failure, and so on. Early POH's had no or very little info on emergency procedures, until manufacturers started getting sued half to death over people that died because they did the wrong things. Now, with most airplanes built since the mid-70s, there isn't any excuse not to have the info, except maybe not living long enough to read the whole thing :-) Dan |
#5
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![]() "Dan Thomas" wrote in message om... Canadian aircraft are required, by law, to carry fire extinguishers. I checked the US FARs but couldn't see that an extinguisher is required. However, a $30 extinguisher could save your life, not to mention the airplane. The only fire extinguisher worth having on your plane is halon. The US does not require you to carry a fire extinguisher. |
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