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![]() "G.R. Patterson III" wrote in message ... Ron Natalie wrote: Frankly, we NEVER touched that lever. Absolutely! In my 150, it never got turned. After 25+ years in one position, I felt that nothing good could happen by moving it. Yep, unless the plane is on fire... |
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Ron Natalie wrote:
"G.R. Patterson III" wrote in message ... Ron Natalie wrote: Frankly, we NEVER touched that lever. Absolutely! In my 150, it never got turned. After 25+ years in one position, I felt that nothing good could happen by moving it. Yep, unless the plane is on fire... I turn the fuel valve all the way around on Cessnas before EVERY flight and teach my students to do the same. It is a very nice thing to know that this valve can be turned BEFORE the plane catches fire. It is also good to know how much force it takes. Of course when fueling Cessnas, it is best to have this handle in anything but BOTH because some fuel will cross feed faster than you can climb down the latter and scurry to the other side. I teach this on Pipers too. I have had many a student that couldn't turn the Cherokee fuel selector to OFF because he/she couldn't figure out the detent without some coaching. That's not a learning process you have time for in a real emergency when the fuel needs to be shut off now..... |
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![]() "Bob Taylor" wrote in message ... Ron Natalie wrote: "G.R. Patterson III" wrote in message ... Ron Natalie wrote: Frankly, we NEVER touched that lever. Absolutely! In my 150, it never got turned. After 25+ years in one position, I felt that nothing good could happen by moving it. Yep, unless the plane is on fire... I turn the fuel valve all the way around on Cessnas before EVERY flight and teach my students to do the same. It is a very nice thing to know that this valve can be turned BEFORE the plane catches fire. It is also good to know how much force it takes. Of course when fueling Cessnas, it is best to have this handle in anything but BOTH because some fuel will cross feed faster than you can climb down the latter and scurry to the other side. Yeah, we carry a pair of pliers and a screwdriver in case anything like the fuel select handle breaks but we never fool whith the fuel tank select while in the pattern. That's a pre-descent or in range item. I used to fly with a wwII guy who would switch from right tank, to Off, let the engine start to die, and then switch to left tank, as part of his preflight. He explained that he was checking the fuel feed and fuel select integrity. made sense, at least he knew that the lever was free and he had feed from both tanks. R.Wallace I teach this on Pipers too. I have had many a student that couldn't turn the Cherokee fuel selector to OFF because he/she couldn't figure out the detent without some coaching. That's not a learning process you have time for in a real emergency when the fuel needs to be shut off now..... |
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