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About 3 seconds..
Cherokee Warrior, Lyc O 320... Dave On Fri, 7 May 2010 10:00:10 -0700 (PDT), a wrote: On May 7, 11:41*am, Mark wrote: On May 7, 10:06*am, "Ęslop" wrote: "Mark" wrote in message ... Had carb heat on, as rpms were below the arc. But no, I wasn't instructed to input throttle during the descent. Is that what you mean? Your CFI should have been doing that. All of mine did, every time. Prevents such occurrences. I'm speechless. We have a choice of appx.7 cfi's to choose from at this academy. *I'll try another. If the head instructor knew, this one would be fired. In hindsight, the gravity of what happened yesterday is serious. I barely had time to pull out. On the way back up I was compelled to keep scanning that field. It looked possible but there was something barely visible running across it. Now I'm thinking it was a ditch. It would be useful to simply ask your CFI what happened. "Hands flying all over" doesn't cut it, there are only a few things to do. My guess would have been carb ice: If you were coming down from 4500 to say 1000 at 500 fpm that would be 6 to 8 minutes of throttle closed gliding. If the RH was high I am not at all sure I'd expect carb heat to keep ahead of the icing for that length of time, but others more expert with those airplanes may have a different opinion. My Mooney has an injected engine, but when coming down from altitude it is very rarely with a closed throttle, and cowl flaps are in play too, engines are to be babied and thermal shock is a bad thing. For that matter, the time the throttle is moved the fastest, and even then it's not very fast, is when I decide to go around. Here's a question for the aviators among us. How long do you take to go from idle to take-off power when you're "position and hold" to "cleared for immediate"? As I sit here and think about it, I'm guessing it takes me a slow count to 5 to get to full throttle, and that is assuming RPMs follow throttle position pretty closely. . . |
#12
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On May 7, 1:00*pm, a wrote:
On May 7, 11:41*am, Mark wrote: On May 7, 10:06*am, "Ęslop" wrote: "Mark" wrote in message .... Had carb heat on, as rpms were below the arc. But no, I wasn't instructed to input throttle during the descent. Is that what you mean? Your CFI should have been doing that. All of mine did, every time. Prevents such occurrences. I'm speechless. We have a choice of appx.7 cfi's to choose from at this academy. *I'll try another. If the head instructor knew, this one would be fired. In hindsight, the gravity of what happened yesterday is serious. I barely had time to pull out. On the way back up I was compelled to keep scanning that field. It looked possible but there was something barely visible running across it. Now I'm thinking it was a ditch. It would be useful to simply ask your CFI what happened. Yes, I've been trying to catch up with him to do that, but now I'm convinced that it was not clearing the engine. We spent considerable time going over the radio calls and frequency, along with incidentals, ie, fuel cut-off, opening the door in the event of a bent frame on on impact, etc. *"Hands flying all over" doesn't cut it, there are only a few things to do. Not "all over", but just an extremely fast combination of manuvers that made the engine respond.(carb heat and throttle) My guess would have been carb ice: If you were coming down from 4500 to say 1000 at 500 fpm that would be 6 to 8 minutes of throttle closed gliding. Yes. If the RH was high I am not at all sure I'd expect carb heat to keep ahead of the icing for that length of time, but others more expert with those airplanes may have a different opinion. Cessna 150 in this case. I fly others. My Mooney has an injected engine, but when coming down from altitude it is very rarely with a closed throttle, and cowl flaps are in play too, engines are to be babied and thermal shock is a bad thing. For that matter, the time the throttle is moved the fastest, and even then it's not very fast, is when I decide to go around. Here's a question for the aviators among us. How long do you take to go from idle to take-off power when you're "position and hold" to "cleared for immediate"? As I sit here and think about it, I'm guessing it takes me a slow count to 5 to get to full throttle, and that is assuming RPMs follow throttle position pretty closely. . .- Hide quoted text - - Show quoted text - |
#13
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On May 7, 2:15*pm, Ari wrote:
On Fri, 7 May 2010 10:00:10 -0700 (PDT), a wrote: Here's a question for the aviators among us. How long do you take to go from idle to take-off power when you're "position and hold" to "cleared for immediate"? As I sit here and think about it, I'm guessing it takes me a slow count to 5 to get to full throttle, and that is assuming RPMs follow throttle position pretty closely. In my Velocity... I didn't realize you had a Velocity. I understand they are pitch sensitive. --- Mark |
#14
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On May 8, 7:10*am, Mark wrote:
On May 7, 1:00*pm, a wrote: On May 7, 11:41*am, Mark wrote: On May 7, 10:06*am, "Ęslop" wrote: "Mark" wrote in message ... Had carb heat on, as rpms were below the arc. But no, I wasn't instructed to input throttle during the descent. Is that what you mean? Your CFI should have been doing that. All of mine did, every time. Prevents such occurrences. I'm speechless. We have a choice of appx.7 cfi's to choose from at this academy. *I'll try another. If the head instructor knew, this one would be fired. In hindsight, the gravity of what happened yesterday is serious. I barely had time to pull out. On the way back up I was compelled to keep scanning that field. It looked possible but there was something barely visible running across it. Now I'm thinking it was a ditch. It would be useful to simply ask your CFI what happened. Yes, I've been trying to catch up with him to do that, but now I'm convinced that it was not clearing the engine. We spent considerable time going over the radio calls and frequency, along with incidentals, ie, fuel cut-off, opening the door in the event of a bent frame on on impact, etc. **"Hands flying all over" doesn't cut it, there are only a few things to do. Not "all over", but just an extremely fast combination of manuvers that made the engine respond.(carb heat and throttle) My guess would have been carb ice: If you were coming down from 4500 to say 1000 at 500 fpm that would be 6 to 8 minutes of throttle closed gliding. Yes. If the RH was high I am not at all sure I'd expect carb heat to keep ahead of the icing for that length of time, but others more expert with those airplanes may have a different opinion. Cessna 150 in this case. I fly others. * My Mooney has an injected engine, but when coming down from altitude it is very rarely with a closed throttle, and cowl flaps are in play too, engines are to be babied and thermal shock is a bad thing. For that matter, the time the throttle is moved the fastest, and even then it's not very fast, is when I decide to go around. Here's a question for the aviators among us. How long do you take to go from idle to take-off power when you're "position and hold" to "cleared for immediate"? As I sit here and think about it, I'm guessing it takes me a slow count to 5 to get to full throttle, and that is assuming RPMs follow throttle position pretty closely. . .- Hide quoted text - - Show quoted text - Real life stuff. maintain control! Carb heat maintain control Mixture maintain control fuel pump maintain control switch tanks a/s for best endurance then if not talking to ATC call 121.5 Once long ago in a Mooney Ranger (not an injected engine) I had the carb heat cable fail during a NDB approach in IMC. I tried everything on the check list, then prop pitch, landing lights, landing gear, cowl flaps etc. Turns out -- this is the lesson, guys -- if there's a lot of carb ice, leaning the mixture works. It gave me enough engine to get to an alternate. Some people know how to make an engine backfire -- that is, ignite the mixture in the intake manifold and blow out carb ice. I don't know how to do that, and since my airplane gets pulled by an IO 360 I don't worry about that anymore. |
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