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#11
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On Mar 27, 6:17*pm, wrote:
Holy Single Points of Failure, Batman!!!!!! My airplane only has one engine with one crankshaft and one propeller!!! And only one rudder too!!!!! ZOMG!!!!! I'm gonna DIE!!! And so are you. And that's guaranteed. 100% of us are all gonna die. That's certainly guaranteed, but I personally have no desire to hasten my death. That won't keep me from flying. Or from flying IFR. It hasn't kept me from soaring, skydiving, BASE jumping, riding motorcycles, traveling to South America, etc. It has, however, caused me to pay attention to single point failures. A rudder failure in a single engine airplane won't ever kill you. It just means you will have to land a little hot and straight into the wind, and that may mean some damage (though if the way lots of students land these days is any indication, maybe not so much), but as long as you keep your head, you will live. You shouldn't even get hurt in a lot of airplanes (I have a suspicion that most of the Cherokees on the rental line are landed without rudder use as a matter of course). An engine failure in a single engine airplane has a likelihood of killing you, and that likelihood depends a lot on how you use the airplane and what sort of airplane it is (check into the accident record of Cessna T210's sometime - pretty scary). All planes are not created equal. Some have more nasty single point failures than others. The OP actually brought up a point that, while not totally valid, is also something that (in my experience) most pilots have not considered - and should. There are planes out there (single AND twin) where a single point failure will actually take down the entire electrical system and give you a dark airplane. What's more, some of these single point failures are (a) relatively common, and (b) more likely to occur as the plane gets older and wiring is not replaced. Day-VFR, this is not a big deal. Heck, day-VFR I'll cheerfully fly a plane with no electrical system at all (and have). But night-IFR it's not so nice. Even night-VFR. BTDT. If you're flying a plane where several common single point failures exist, each of which alone can take down your electrical system, you would be foolish to fly it IFR in conditions where you can't simply cruise to VFR or make a safe descent over an open area, unless you have a reasonable backup. Once upon a time that backup used to be a handheld Nav-Com, which allowed you to shoot some sort of half-ass VOR or LOC (and I do know someone who has had to do it). These days the sensible backup is a handheld GPS. Of course to make use of it, you need to know how to shoot an approach off it. What's more, you need to be able to shoot the full approach because you won't be getting RADAR services. Do you know how? Have you ever tried? Think maybe you should? Michael |
#12
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On Mar 26, 10:30*pm, wrote:
The battery Contactor on *MOST *GA *airplanes *is 'powered' ( grounded) * by ONE wire! I fly a retract so I always carry a spare set of landing gear in the back. You never know when you may need it and your life may depend on it! -Robert |
#13
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