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On Dec 1, 2:00*pm, Mark wrote:
On Nov 30, 1:53*pm, "Ken S. Tucker" wrote: Meticulous pilot runs out of gas and can't land in a corn field! http://news.yahoo.com/s/ap_travel/20...travel_brief_f... Must have got his license from Canadian Tire. Ken That's what happened to a Beech King Air turbo a couple of weeks ago near me. Ran out of gas, for as yet undetermined reasons. Shame to see such a nice plane totalled, but at least no fatalities. The guys at Stevens have a good reputation. http://www.greenvilleonline.com/arti...11110344/1004/... I'd like to know how many fuel exhaustions were associated with a successful emergency off-field landing. Running out of fuel should not automatically lead to a crash/fatality if the pilot practices his emergency procedures regularly. This does not excuse the need to have 30+ mins excess over plan of course. Cheers Cheers |
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"Flaps_50!" wrote:
I'd like to know how many fuel exhaustions were associated with a successful emergency off-field landing. The AOPA writes a yearly report on accidents (see http://www.aopa.org/asf/publications/nall.html) that addresses questions like that; here's the latest one: http://www.aopa.org/asf/publications/08nall.pdf Go to page 14 and you should find an approximate answer - at least for the year they examined in that report. |
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On Dec 1, 4:59*pm, Jim Logajan wrote:
"Flaps_50!" wrote: I'd like to know how many fuel exhaustions were associated with a successful emergency off-field *landing. The AOPA writes a yearly report on accidents (seehttp://www.aopa.org/asf/publications/nall.html) that addresses questions like that; here's the latest one: http://www.aopa.org/asf/publications/08nall.pdf Go to page 14 and you should find an approximate answer - at least for the year they examined in that report. Thnx. So many fuel incidents! Cheers |
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On Nov 30, 9:02*pm, "Flaps_50!" wrote:
if the pilot practices his emergency procedures regularly. Since you allegedly fly a plane, when was the last time you practiced your emergency procedures OUTSIDE a simulator? How often do you practice OUTSIDE a simulator to define regularly? Once a day, once a month, once a year? Very direct questions above. Can you give me direct answers? |
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On Dec 2, 6:08*am, " wrote:
On Nov 30, 9:02*pm, "Flaps_50!" wrote: if the pilot practices his emergency procedures regularly. Since you allegedly fly a plane, when was the last time you practiced your emergency procedures OUTSIDE a simulator? 3 weeks ago. I don't sim -although that might save me $$ -unless I were to pay to use a full cockpit 737 sim! How often do you practice OUTSIDE a simulator to define regularly? Once a day, once a month, once a year? About every 2 months. What about you? Very direct questions above. *Can you give me direct answers? If you are trying to 'prove' I don't fly real planes you should just give up. Cheers |
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On Nov 30, 5:00 pm, Mark wrote:
On Nov 30, 1:53 pm, "Ken S. Tucker" wrote: Meticulous pilot runs out of gas and can't land in a corn field! http://news.yahoo.com/s/ap_travel/20...travel_brief_f... Must have got his license from Canadian Tire. Ken That's what happened to a Beech King Air turbo a couple of weeks ago near me. Ran out of gas, for as yet undetermined reasons. Shame to see such a nice plane totalled, but at least no fatalities. The guys at Stevens have a good reputation. http://www.greenvilleonline.com/arti...11110344/1004/... Mark OOPs.... 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. 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%. So a cross check of a wrist watch with the fuel gauge is a no-brainer. Ken |
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![]() "Ken S. Tucker" wrote in message ... 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 |
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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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