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#1
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Jay Honeck wrote:
Crikey! Three separate systems failed during a single flight? Either the odds played out against you in the worst way possible, or the folks who did your pre-buy inspection missed a bunch of stuff. Knowing how they build in redundancies in aircraft (which would pale the best HAZOP study), the odds are very heavily on the latter. Nice ending to what could easily have gotten a lot worse. Ramapriya |
#2
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![]() Wow! That was a interesting flight. I don't think I would tell the wife. |
#3
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too late, and you're right--it was a mistake
Aluckyguess wrote: Wow! That was a interesting flight. I don't think I would tell the wife. |
#4
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I'm glad you made it ok. As said here that second engine is nice to have
around. Since you mentioned you left Magnolia Arkansas and that is only about 30 miles from me (ELD) I'm wondering is the plane originally from around here and was your pre-buy done by anyone from around here. "swag" wrote in message oups.com... I recently acquired a 1973 P337 Skymaster and had a bit of trouble with it on a flight to New Jersey when I lost an engine enroute. I left Magnolia Arkansas in the morning and flew to Knoxville for lunch and refueling, then on to CDW --Essex County, New Jersey. Over Allentown, I noticed fluctuations in manifold pressure on the front engine and rough operation. The EGT and cylinder head temps were fine, but my oil pressure was down to nothing, so I shut down the engine and feathered the prop. I called ATC and let them know. Then I flew the plane on towards CDW keeping a close eye on the rear engine guages. Since the engine is turbocharged, I had no trouble holding altitude on one engine and therefore decided to continue to my destination (about 15 min more). When I arrived at CDW, they had men and equipment waiting and let me use whatever runway I wanted. I chose 22, entered a right downwind, and put my gear down. But it wouldn't go down. So I circled and pumped it down. Then no gear light came on. I tried to call the tower, but I had lost all electrical. (Hence the gear light failure). So I lined up on final and landed the plane. The mechanic at CDW looked everything over the next day and reported the front engine had blown an oil seal for one of the cylinders, and the rear engine's alternator was bad. In addition he said the fuel line to the rear engine had eroded through and there was a gas leak in the rear engine compartment. He noticed this because of a leak of gas on the hanger floor. I swear there was no leakage of gas under the plane prior to the trip. So I had three systems fail in one leg of the trip. The plane was one month new to me. I had 30 hours on it since purchasing it and had fortunately practiced single engine landings and manual gear extension. For 30 hours there was no excessive oil consumption or leaks or ther signs of trouble. So it's hard to blame the mechanics who worked on it last. Just fate I guess. |
#5
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"swag" wrote in message
I recently acquired a 1973 P337 Skymaster and had a bit of trouble with it on a flight to New Jersey when I lost an engine enroute. I had a C-337 once. I never could get the rear alternator to work for more than an hour (Both engines can be hand-propped, but the front engine is a bit more of as pain). I had a fuel injection spider line break on the rear engine which caused the engine to shutdown sooner than I expected due to fuel exhaustion. In hindsight I wondered when I would have detected a fire on that rear engine if it had caught fire. The gear system is a CF. After the second indicator problem, I just flew around with the gear down. The cabin is small and noisy. The fly-over noise is loud. I got rid of it and bought another Aztec. D. |
#6
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I'm happy with the noise level (P337) and not dissatisfied with the
cabin size. You're right about not ever knowing until too late if the rear engine catches on fire. I may have to get rid of this if I ever want my wife to get in a small plane again. She has sworn off ever setting foot in this one. Capt.Doug wrote: "swag" wrote in message I recently acquired a 1973 P337 Skymaster and had a bit of trouble with it on a flight to New Jersey when I lost an engine enroute. I had a C-337 once. I never could get the rear alternator to work for more than an hour (Both engines can be hand-propped, but the front engine is a bit more of as pain). I had a fuel injection spider line break on the rear engine which caused the engine to shutdown sooner than I expected due to fuel exhaustion. In hindsight I wondered when I would have detected a fire on that rear engine if it had caught fire. The gear system is a CF. After the second indicator problem, I just flew around with the gear down. The cabin is small and noisy. The fly-over noise is loud. I got rid of it and bought another Aztec. D. |
#7
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On 2006-06-07, Capt.Doug wrote:
cabin is small and noisy. The fly-over noise is loud. I got rid of it and bought another Aztec. You can say that again. We have a C337 up at our airfield now, and the noise complaints are coming. The owner had to move from his own land because he was generating excessive noise complaints (it doesn't help that he flies in a rather unneighbourly manner - advancing the props to fine on downwind and directly overflying noise sensitive areas that are easy to avoid). -- Yes, the Reply-To email address is valid. Oolite-Linux: an Elite tribute: http://oolite-linux.berlios.de |
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