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#1
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Ok, so it's snowing out. Presumably the water in the clouds is all frozen and
there should be no icing concerns. Under what circumstances am I wrong? Jose -- (for Email, make the obvious changes in my address) |
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In article , Teacherjh
wrote: Ok, so it's snowing out. Presumably the water in the clouds is all frozen and there should be no icing concerns. Under what circumstances am I wrong? An inversion aloft. The air gets warmer as you climb, up to a point. |
#3
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Most of the time there will be some ice as all of the water is not frozen.
Often snow does not come from clouds at all but goes directly from a vapor to a crystal. In that cast there is no cloud and no ice. Today it was snowing heavily on the ground where it was -1C and I found ice in the clouds all the way to the tops at about 16,000' where it was below -20C (most of the ice was lower however). If the snow is the pellet type it is formed by liquid droplets freezing together, so there is definately liquid water in clouds producing this kind of snow. .. Mike MU-2 "Teacherjh" wrote in message ... Ok, so it's snowing out. Presumably the water in the clouds is all frozen and there should be no icing concerns. Under what circumstances am I wrong? Jose -- (for Email, make the obvious changes in my address) |
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Teacherjh wrote:
Ok, so it's snowing out. Presumably the water in the clouds is all frozen and there should be no icing concerns. Under what circumstances am I wrong? You are flying a Cessna Skylane with the air intake under the spinner. Heavy snow can clog it requiring you to fly with carb heat applied causing a measurable loss of manifold pressure. Also, prior to having static wicks installed, I got a very bad case of p-static when flying in cold snow. Couldn't hear the controller on the radio at all for 15 minutes. Not an icing problem per se, but a problem caused by flying in "dry" snow. Matt |
#5
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Matthew S. Whiting wrote:
You are flying a Cessna Skylane with the air intake under the spinner. Heavy snow can clog it requiring you to fly with carb heat applied causing a measurable loss of manifold pressure. The later model C172s and 182s have an automatic alternate air feature that will pull air from within the engine cavity if the air intake below the spinner clogs up. The pilot can expect a drop in RPMs of about 10% if this occurs. -- Peter ----== Posted via Newsfeed.Com - Unlimited-Uncensored-Secure Usenet News==---- http://www.newsfeed.com The #1 Newsgroup Service in the World! 100,000 Newsgroups ---= 19 East/West-Coast Specialized Servers - Total Privacy via Encryption =--- |
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Peter R. wrote:
The later model C172s and 182s have an automatic alternate air feature that will pull air from within the engine cavity if the air intake below the spinner clogs up. Don't all planes? It's a prety common feature that the alternate air door is spring loaded. Pulling the carb heat (or alternate air) knob will pull the door open, but even without pulling the knob, if the pressure differential gets too high (i.e. the intake is clogged), the door will open on its own against spring pressure. |
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Roy Smith wrote:
Don't all planes? I do not know. I interpreted the previous poster to imply that pilots of all C182 models had to pull the carb heat if the front air intake clogged. Thus, I offered what little aircraft knowledge I have about the later fuel-injected models that do not have a carb heat or alternate air lever inside the cockpit. It's a prety common feature that the alternate air door is spring loaded. OK, I'll take your word for it. Pulling the carb heat (or alternate air) knob will pull the door open, but even without pulling the knob, if the pressure differential gets too high (i.e. the intake is clogged), the door will open on its own against spring pressure. Roger. -- Peter ----== Posted via Newsfeed.Com - Unlimited-Uncensored-Secure Usenet News==---- http://www.newsfeed.com The #1 Newsgroup Service in the World! 100,000 Newsgroups ---= 19 East/West-Coast Specialized Servers - Total Privacy via Encryption =--- |
#8
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Roy Smith wrote:
Peter R. wrote: The later model C172s and 182s have an automatic alternate air feature that will pull air from within the engine cavity if the air intake below the spinner clogs up. Don't all planes? It's a prety common feature that the alternate air door is spring loaded. Pulling the carb heat (or alternate air) knob will pull the door open, but even without pulling the knob, if the pressure differential gets too high (i.e. the intake is clogged), the door will open on its own against spring pressure. My Skylane didn't open automatically. I don't know if it was designed to or not, but I know it didn't. At least not completely, and partial carb heat was often worse than none at all. Matt |
#9
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Roy Smith wrote in message ...
Peter R. wrote: The later model C172s and 182s have an automatic alternate air feature that will pull air from within the engine cavity if the air intake below the spinner clogs up. Don't all planes? I know DA-40s don't. |
#10
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Peter R. wrote:
Matthew S. Whiting wrote: You are flying a Cessna Skylane with the air intake under the spinner. Heavy snow can clog it requiring you to fly with carb heat applied causing a measurable loss of manifold pressure. The later model C172s and 182s have an automatic alternate air feature that will pull air from within the engine cavity if the air intake below the spinner clogs up. The pilot can expect a drop in RPMs of about 10% if this occurs. The 182 shouldn't lose RPM if the prop governor is working correctly. Matt |
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