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#1
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Yesterday I flew a cessna 172 in the hard IFR. When I penetrated
apparently a heavy cumulonimbus rain cloud area, the VSI and altimeter started to oscillate and bounce +/- 250 FPM (ALT oscilated 200~300 ft up and back). The rate of bounces was about 3 to 4 Hz (3 to 4 times per second). It lasted for about 10 minutes until I passed that area. The AI and airspeed was relatively stable in such light to moderate chops condition. Can anyone explain the possible cause of the oscillation? And did anyone experience this before? If it was the heavy rain that caused this, I still don't understand why. (please explain how can rain cause this?) The lesson learned here was to turn on the alternate air intake if the airplane was equipped with one. Or from the book, "break the VSI glass" in such condition. Well, I did not do it this time (other than turn on the pitot heat, OAT was 35F). Next time if it happened, I will break the glass (or turn on the alternate in a equipped airplane). Any thoughts are welcome. -cpu |
#2
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![]() the VSI and altimeter started to oscillate and bounce +/- 250 FPM (ALT oscilated 200~300 ft up and back). The rate of bounces was about 3 to 4 Hz I've never seen it, but that won't stop me from speculating. ![]() The VSI and altimiter share the static port, the airspeed indicator uses that and the pitot tube. So, if it is an erronious reading, I'd suspect the static port. However, if the static pressure is varying like that (due to rain getting in?) I'd also expect the airspeed to show something, and you say it was relatively stable. So I'm not convinced of this. It could be that you were running through waves of actual pressure differences which were being accurately measured. At typical cruise in a 172 you'd be doing something like forty feet in a quarter of a second. Maybe thirty if you had slowed down. If you were flying through up and down drafts, that might explain it (i'd expect pressure differences which would drive the flow). Did you experience accelerations (measured by the Mark 1 Anatomical Sitting Sensor) that were in sync with the oscillations of the pressure instruments? I doubt that you actually changed altitude by 200 feet up and back four times per second however. ![]() Next time if it happened, I will break the glass (or turn on the alternate in a equipped airplane). I'd use alternate air if equipped, but I wouldn't break the glass just yet. It's not clear to me that it would help, and you don't yet have an emergency situation. I'd advise ATC and probably also request higher if terrain was a consideration and ice wasn't, just to ensure clearance. And yes, turn on the pitot heat, but the problem (if any) is in the static system so pitot heat wouldn't do anything. Now if I thought that the average of the altitude and VS indicated was suspect, then I would reconsider breaking the glass. Jose -- (for Email, make the obvious changes in my address) |
#3
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I've experienced wild fluctuations in IMC due to water droplets blocking the
single static air source of the 172. The 182, which has 2 ports on either side of the cowling, doesn't seem to do this. Nevertheless, engage the alternate static air and the problem should go away. Don't break any gauges unless you were going to replace them anyway. "cpu" wrote in message om... Yesterday I flew a cessna 172 in the hard IFR. When I penetrated apparently a heavy cumulonimbus rain cloud area, the VSI and altimeter started to oscillate and bounce +/- 250 FPM (ALT oscilated 200~300 ft up and back). The rate of bounces was about 3 to 4 Hz (3 to 4 times per second). It lasted for about 10 minutes until I passed that area. The AI and airspeed was relatively stable in such light to moderate chops condition. Can anyone explain the possible cause of the oscillation? And did anyone experience this before? If it was the heavy rain that caused this, I still don't understand why. (please explain how can rain cause this?) The lesson learned here was to turn on the alternate air intake if the airplane was equipped with one. Or from the book, "break the VSI glass" in such condition. Well, I did not do it this time (other than turn on the pitot heat, OAT was 35F). Next time if it happened, I will break the glass (or turn on the alternate in a equipped airplane). Any thoughts are welcome. -cpu |
#5
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#6
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Unless the blockage rattling around was after the ASI and before the VSI
and ALT. Interesteing idea. Andrew Sarangan wrote: This clearly has to be an instrument error, because a 200' oscillation four times per second will produce several thousand G's. Are you certain that the rate of oscillation was actually 4Hz? It would be pretty hard to even see the altimeter needle if it was oscillating that fast. Another possibility is the static tube that feeds the VSI and ALT could have a blockage that was rattling around when you experienced the chop. But that still doesn't explain why the ASI was not bouncing at the same rate. (cpu) wrote in news:26751d41.0404181215.35b668d9 @posting.google.com: Yesterday I flew a cessna 172 in the hard IFR. When I penetrated apparently a heavy cumulonimbus rain cloud area, the VSI and altimeter started to oscillate and bounce +/- 250 FPM (ALT oscilated 200~300 ft up and back). The rate of bounces was about 3 to 4 Hz (3 to 4 times per second). It lasted for about 10 minutes until I passed that area. The AI and airspeed was relatively stable in such light to moderate chops condition. Can anyone explain the possible cause of the oscillation? And did anyone experience this before? If it was the heavy rain that caused this, I still don't understand why. (please explain how can rain cause this?) The lesson learned here was to turn on the alternate air intake if the airplane was equipped with one. Or from the book, "break the VSI glass" in such condition. Well, I did not do it this time (other than turn on the pitot heat, OAT was 35F). Next time if it happened, I will break the glass (or turn on the alternate in a equipped airplane). Any thoughts are welcome. -cpu |
#7
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#8
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![]() Are you certain that the rate of oscillation was actually 4Hz? It would be pretty hard to even see the altimeter needle if it was oscillating that fast. 4 Hz is not that fast. Jose -- (for Email, make the obvious changes in my address) |
#9
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#10
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![]() If an altimeter is going through 400' of altitude change in 250ms, that is definitely fast. Yes, but not too fast to see. Jose -- (for Email, make the obvious changes in my address) |
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