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I'm curious what Instrument Rated members of this group use for
personal minimums for takeoff and landing for single engine aircraft. The question is prompted by a recent flight where the takeoff conditions were 200 ft + 1 mile. That's lower than I've ever done before, and it occurred to me that if I had any significant engine problems, it was all over unless I was extremly lucky. |
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On 17 Jan 2007 07:11:47 -0800, "paul kgyy"
wrote: I'm curious what Instrument Rated members of this group use for personal minimums for takeoff and landing for single engine aircraft. The question is prompted by a recent flight where the takeoff conditions were 200 ft + 1 mile. That's lower than I've ever done before, and it occurred to me that if I had any significant engine problems, it was all over unless I was extremly lucky. I fly a single. I will land in minimums, but will not launch into them. 500ft on takeoff is more comforting in the event of an engine failure. I am also cautious about flying over extended areas of low ceilings/vis, the so-called low-IFR. Had to put this into practice about 1 week ago, as we had fog in the morning. The fog was thick, at times less than 1/4 mile vis. However, looking straight up, you could occasionally see the blue sky, and it was obvious the fog layer was less than 500 feet thick. My homefield is ~3400ft, without precision approaches, and surrounded by homes and gravel pits. Not a good engine out/IMC scenario, so I waited for the fog to clear and departed VFR. -Nathan |
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![]() paul kgyy wrote: I'm curious what Instrument Rated members of this group use for personal minimums for takeoff and landing for single engine aircraft. The question is prompted by a recent flight where the takeoff conditions were 200 ft + 1 mile. That's lower than I've ever done before, and it occurred to me that if I had any significant engine problems, it was all over unless I was extremly lucky. Flying IFR over low ceilings is like flying at night. There will often be phases of your flight that an engine failure outcome may be very, very bad. Its like driving through an intersection on a green light. There is always the chance someone will run the red light and kill you. You just have to decide your own personal risk management levels. Personally, I have launched in that and less. I also chose to buy a factory new engine rather than overhaul my last one, I do oil analysis every oil change and do a boroscope inspection inside the engine at least every 6 months. I could still lose an engine but that's where I've choosen to set my level. We live in the fog belt and I often take students up to do multiple approaches when its 200 ft 1/2 mile or even less. Sometimes we don't even see the approach lights at minimums (we have an alternate airport nearby above the fog). I think its important that students see what it really looks like to break out so low and to understand the difference in intensity level between breaking out (or taking off) with a 500 ft ceiling vs a 100ft ceiling (at 001VV you usually have an 80% chance of seeing the rabbit). I've seen otherwise great students almost lose it when entering the close right after take off. I'd rather have them experience that with me that just to trust me that its different. -Robert, CFII |
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![]() I'm curious what Instrument Rated members of this group use for personal minimums for takeoff and landing for single engine aircraft. The question is prompted by a recent flight where the takeoff conditions were 200 ft + 1 mile. That's lower than I've ever done before, and it occurred to me that if I had any significant engine problems, it was all over unless I was extremly lucky. Aim at worst case without using your luck. What counts are the "way-out" options: What to do with an inflight problem (anything better as an engine failure) after take-off? Can you do the go-around-procedure? What are the minimums now for a landing at your "new destination-welcome-home" airport? What do you do enroute with an engine failure? Hopefully your are high enough to navigate, decide and communicate. You better have some VFR below, to avoid trees and cumulus grantitus during your perfect 500ft/min one-way descend. At the destination you want to see the runway early enough to fit your personal experience and capability. The legal CAT I conditions (200 ft, 550 m) are something special! Personally I got my IFR Ticket last year, so I set my personal minimus rather high for the beginning. I seek for a "way out" under all conditions: Such as suitable VFR below and 1000 ft at the destination. Maybe at a later stage I would reduce the 1000ft to NON-PREC. conditions. I did not dare to deal with the legal CATI options (PREC. APR.) but tried losy weather in a simulator. Try to see the approach lights in 550m yourself with a 200ft ceiling! MS Flight simulator is absolutely sufficient for this impression. |
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paul kgyy wrote:
I'm curious what Instrument Rated members of this group use for personal minimums for takeoff and landing for single engine aircraft. The question is prompted by a recent flight where the takeoff conditions were 200 ft + 1 mile. That's lower than I've ever done before, and it occurred to me that if I had any significant engine problems, it was all over unless I was extremly lucky. One of the risks you take in flying single engine night/IFR is engine failure without the option of seeing your landing spot until you are comitted. I know several people who have had this happen. Most of them are still alive. One is not. The reality of engine failure fatalities is this - most of them do not occur due to unsurvivable terrain. Most of them occur due to failure to attain/maintain flying speed. In my opinion, there really isn't much difference (in a single engine airplane) between taking off into 500 ft ceilings and 50 ft ceilings. Either way, you don't have the altitude to do anything but land pretty much straight ahead. Either way, the chance of engine failure low enough for it to matter is tiny. Look at it this way - you just ran up your engine, and all indications were perfectly normal (I trust you would not launch into IMC otherwise). The engine was fine on the entire last flight (I trust you would not launch into IMC on your first flight after maintenance). What are the odds the engine is going to fail in the first two minutes of flight? I would be a lot more concerned about extended flight over an area of low IMC - that pushes up the exposure. Most of my IFR and night flying is in a twin these days, because I'm just not that comfortable with the exposure of flying a fast single night/IFR. Doesn't mean I won't do it - I will do it when my plane is down and I borrow one, and I will do it to train someone. I just figure the more you do it, the better the odds that it will eventually catch up with you. Michael |
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On 17 Jan 2007 09:27:26 -0800, "Michael"
wrote: In my opinion, there really isn't much difference (in a single engine airplane) between taking off into 500 ft ceilings and 50 ft ceilings. Either way, you don't have the altitude to do anything but land pretty much straight ahead. Depending on where you fly, I say there is a big difference. In the Midwest, 500 ft offers a lot of options in selecting a landing site. Sure, you aren't going to make the runway, but landing in any open area is better than hitting a tree or a house. 50 ft is 99% luck. Pitch for lowest speed above stall, and pray whatever is in front of you is soft. Hell, if you have really bad luck, you might hit a tree while still in the clouds. -Nathan |
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In article ,
Nathan Young wrote: 50 ft is 99% luck. Pitch for lowest speed above stall, and pray ^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^ whatever is in front of you is soft. Hell, if you have really bad luck, you might hit a tree while still in the clouds. -Nathan "Pitch for lowest speed above stall"?!? While this may provide for the lowest possible forward airspeed/groundspeed, you're going to have one helluva sink rate. In addition, your ability to manuver and flare with be severely degrated. Everything I've ever read and been taught says to push the nose over to maintain best glide speed (which is usually very close to Vy for most light singles). There was even an article in last month's issue of AOPA pilot about this which mentioned how much you really do need to push the nose over to attain best glide speed upon engine failure after take off. I'd be curious as to your rationale for pitching to lowest speed above stall.... -- Dane |
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Dane Spearing wrote:
"Pitch for lowest speed above stall"?!? While this may provide for the lowest possible forward airspeed/groundspeed, you're going to have one helluva sink rate. In addition, your ability to manuver and flare with be severely degrated. Everything I've ever read and been taught says to push the nose over to maintain best glide speed (which is usually very close to Vy for most light singles). There was even an article in last month's issue of AOPA pilot about this which mentioned how much you really do need to push the nose over to attain best glide speed upon engine failure after take off. I'd be curious as to your rationale for pitching to lowest speed above stall.... I don't want to speak for the other poster but the rationale seems obvious. If you can't see anything and/or you don't know what's in front of you, then how long you stay aloft isn't going to matter. Of course, one does not want to have TOO much of a vertical speed if they value their spine but most likely the thing that's to the aircraft's nose will be the killer item. Marco |
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paul kgyy wrote:
I'm curious what Instrument Rated members of this group use for personal minimums for takeoff and landing for single engine aircraft. The question is prompted by a recent flight where the takeoff conditions were 200 ft + 1 mile. That's lower than I've ever done before, and it occurred to me that if I had any significant engine problems, it was all over unless I was extremly lucky. I'll take off in that if there's improved weather nearby. I will never take off with that if that describes the entire route of flight.... I prefer about 600 feet and 3/4 miles. Otherwise it's a sucker's bet. Frankly, around here you're pretty much screwed anyway if you have problems immediately after takeoff as there's really no where to land but on someone's house. But WTH; you can't live your life in fear. I used to fly in and out of KCLT Monday through Friday in the early AM flying either a Lance or a Geronimo conversion Apache. Some days I sat on the ground waiting for the visibility to improve to legal minimums. Pretty much the second it did I took off, knowing the weather at KRDU was going to be improved by the time I got there. Sometimes it was a bit dicey but I always got in. -- Mortimer Schnerd, RN mschnerdatcarolina.rr.com |
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