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On Dec 1, 4:09*pm, "vaughn"
wrote: "Ken S. Tucker" wrote in ... Well for small a/c (I'm Cessna 152), I fill my own and check for water and of course color. Otherwise, read the meter of the gas input or trust the fella loading you. No way! *(I suspect Ken is another who flies about as much as Mx) *I don't care if you watched the guy top off your tank and now both guages read full. *The wise pilot still visually checks the fuel level before flight (eyeball, finger, or dip stick). *While you are at it, make sure that both filler caps are on tight. Every Flight Manual has a fuel consumption rate graph as a function of power/rpm/cruising speed, so at flight planning, a time and range can be estimated that does not rely on the fuel gauge, which is accurate to +/- 10%. I would LOVE to have a Cessna with a fuel guage that was accurate to +/- 10%. On every Cessna I have ever flown, the fuel guages were best described as semi-usless crap. *Do I look at them? *Yes; because in-flight they are your only direct evidence of remaining fuel. *Do I trust them? *No! So a cross check of a wrist watch with the fuel gauge is a no-brainer. Ken Vaughn The real worry I have about fuel exhaustion, since I almost always take off with full tanks visually confirmed, is a leak or mis leaning the engine on a long flight. Not being exact in leaning -- say, going from 5 to 11 thousand feet without adjusting things -- can change burn from 9 to 11 or 12 gallons an hour. I do my tank switching by fuel gauge or clock, whichever is more conservative. As it happens the fuel gauges on the Mooney are within a few gallons of 16 gallons when they are indicating half full (they are effectively being calibrated each time fuel is put into a tank that is thought to be half full) so that time or gauge redundancy offers some comfort. Many of the suggestions/comments here may actually cause thoughtful pilots to modify their check list -- that would mean this newsgroup is serving a useful purpose. |
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