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#1
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For a standard trainer type airplane does anyone (who owns one not used
for training) go out to the airport when not flying just to wipe the snow off? Does the weight of snow and/or ice damage surfaces, etc? |
#2
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#3
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There's a perfect example of why you should wipe snow and ice off your
airplane sitting up at KSTE. So much ice and snow had accumulated on the tail of a 172 there that the nose gear is completely off the ground and the tail is laying on the ground frozen in a drift. Think about what happens when the snow partially melts and then refreezes INSIDE the airplane. Not everything melts and simply drains away. Jim |
#4
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Jim Burns wrote:
: There's a perfect example of why you should wipe snow and ice off your : airplane sitting up at KSTE. So much ice and snow had accumulated on the : tail of a 172 there that the nose gear is completely off the ground and the : tail is laying on the ground frozen in a drift. Happens 1-2x per year even here in VA. We get 6-12" of snow and all the Cessnas on the tie-down line have their their noses in the air and tails on the ground. Pipers generally seem more nose-heavy so they usually stay put. Fortunately it usually melts off in a day or two if you brush off the big stuff. -Cory -- ************************************************** *********************** * Cory Papenfuss * * Electrical Engineering candidate Ph.D. graduate student * * Virginia Polytechnic Institute and State University * ************************************************** *********************** |
#5
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We got a heavy coating of ice here, last year about this time of year
(KOSU). Nearly every tricycle gear aircraft left outside was nose-up, tail on the ground. It was so bad, some of the antennas on the bottoms of the planes were icicled to the ground. -- Hello, my name is Mike, and I am an airplane addict... |
#6
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#7
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Hangared aircraft can have snow load problems too if the hangar has big
wind leaks. It happened in a Dakota blizzard maybe 30 years ago. |
#8
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![]() "nrp" wrote in message oups.com... Hangared aircraft can have snow load problems too if the hangar has big wind leaks. It happened in a Dakota blizzard maybe 30 years ago. They can also have problems if the hanger roof falls in due to the snow. Happened here, El Dorado Arkansas, a few years ago and crushed two Citations. |
#9
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![]() Quote:
during the great ice storm of the northeast a few years ago a C-172 i used to own got covered with a few inches of solid ice. under the weight of the ice on the tail feathers, the 172 leaned on the tail skid, leaving the wings facing backwards a bit instead of directly down. the weight of the ice was sufficient to bend both wing's rear spars. (the wings supported a block of ice 4 inches thick by 4 feet by 30 odd feet - about 40 cubic feet of ice). snow OTOH would have slid off the wings and not inflicted any damage. fv |
#10
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