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#111
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Try minimizing control inputs to what is necessary to keep your heading in bumpy
air rather than trying to keep the wings absolutely level. It produces an uncomfortable ride, but the bumps do tend to average out somewhat over time as long as you are not making big corrections for each bump. I haven't tried the GPS only thing in really bumpy air. Then again, what is described as moderate to severe by pilots flying aircraft with lighter wing loadings barely ruffles the feathers of a loaded Six. It is a great instrument platform! David Megginson wrote: Ray Andraka writes: I've found that I can fly the airplane IMC with just the HSI page on my Garmin III Pilot as long as I keep the control inputs gentle. Doing this, my instructor covers all the flight instruments. Update rate is a little on the slow side, but as long as you keep your turns gentle it is very doable. My concern is that in moderate turbulence it's much harder to keep control inputs gentle. On my last trip in IMC, for example, I hit a couple of jolts that tipped me past 20 deg bank in a fraction of a second. I'd like to know how well the GPS HSI page works in that situation (I acknowledge that the TC is also tricky when the air's that rough, since it has a slight lag built-in). Has anyone tried using the HSI page on a handheld GPS in moderate turbulence? I'd be very interested in hearing the results (especially if it was on a cloudy day or at night, when there were no light or shadow clues). All the best, David -- --Ray Andraka, P.E. President, the Andraka Consulting Group, Inc. 401/884-7930 Fax 401/884-7950 http://www.andraka.com "They that give up essential liberty to obtain a little temporary safety deserve neither liberty nor safety." -Benjamin Franklin, 1759 |
#112
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I pull mine as part of the run-up on every single flight, IFR or VFR. It is on my
run-up checklist. Dave Butler wrote: Said shuttle valve is also a point of failure. You can check it on the ground with the engine idling. At idle, the manifold will pull more vacuum than the pump. I can count on the fingers of *no* hands the number of pilots I have ever seen perform this check routinely. At risk of beating a dead horse, get the dual-rotor pump from http://www.aeroadvantage.com instead. -- --Ray Andraka, P.E. President, the Andraka Consulting Group, Inc. 401/884-7930 Fax 401/884-7950 http://www.andraka.com "They that give up essential liberty to obtain a little temporary safety deserve neither liberty nor safety." -Benjamin Franklin, 1759 |
#113
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![]() Snowbird wrote: As far as manifold-driven backup vacuum, my issue is: between us, DH and I have about 1000 hrs. Our collective tally is: AI failure (new instrument, less than 1 yr old) --- one DG failue (overhauled instrument, age 4 yrs) --- one vacuum pump failue (about 700 hrs best guess) --- one I concur with your failures. In 1100 hrs, I've had 3 DG failures, 1 AI failure 1 Vacuum pump failure (and that was discovered in the runup). ...and... IIRC part of the installation (and the later AD) is to establish a chart of power settings for adequate operation in the plane in which its installed. Your club plane should have this lurking around in the paperwork, and it should give you a good understanding of when and to what degree it's likely to be helpful. The STC requires a placard with power settings measured in a flight test in your airplane at various RPM settings. -- --Ray Andraka, P.E. President, the Andraka Consulting Group, Inc. 401/884-7930 Fax 401/884-7950 http://www.andraka.com "They that give up essential liberty to obtain a little temporary safety deserve neither liberty nor safety." -Benjamin Franklin, 1759 |
#114
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Snowbird wrote:
[...] if you're messing with a chart or plates or anything else, let go of the yoke. I gotta read this one to my (Grumman specialist) CFI he'll get a good belly laugh too. FWIW, our AA5B does fine hands-off if the pitch trim is OK, even in bouncy stuff, using one's feet to keep it vaguely straight. Once upon a time, in very smooth air (11500' over one of the flat states), self and copilot went for about 20 minutes thinking that the autopilot was on when it wasn't; the plane was tracking perfectly. That's a rather exceptional case, but the four-seat Grummans really aren't *that* twitchy. |
#115
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Guy Elden Jr. wrote:
It's not about a comfort level for me... it's about pilot workload. There is a tremendous amount of work involved in flying heads down in the clouds, so any device that can help alleviate that load is welcome by me. It may be legal to fly in instrument conditions with two VORs and an ADF, but is it really safe if you're the only pilot in the plane, weather is forming all around you, and you have to hand fly the plane? What's "safe"? I fly a fair amount of IMC in an aircraft with an old but rock-solid COM/COM/NAV/ADF stack (plus a panel LORAN that flakes out in precip and a NAV-11 which I'd file under "mostly adequate"), and it's within *my* level of acceptable risk, but that's almost completely an individual call under part 91. That said, I do this because I've trained extensively with this sort of setup, and (much like basic attitude flying) navigating with it eventually became something that I could deal mostly subconsciously, with with plenty of mental bandwith left over for thinking about planning and weather and whatever else. I don't particularly think I'm an uberpilot, though I do think my initial instrument instructors were *excellent*. I'm also not against automation (I occasionally sneak into a phone booth only to emerge as a 767 systems instructor), but there's a *lot* to be said for training, practice, and situational awareness. |
#116
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Peter,
As I said befo Here in Germany, single pilot IFR is legal only with an autopilot with ALT hold on board. Is this true for private flights? Yes. Commercial single pilot IFR is simply forbidden. Pilatus, maker of the PC-12, is vehemently trying to change that. I've said it befo If you're complaining about the FAA and the rules in the US, you haven't looked at Europe yet. -- Thomas Borchert (EDDH) |
#117
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Snowbird wrote:
IIRC part of the installation (and the later AD) is to establish a chart of power settings for adequate operation in the plane in which its installed. Your club plane should have this lurking around in the paperwork, and it should give you a good understanding of when and to what degree it's likely to be helpful. If it's the Precise Flight STC, it had better be placarded on the panel, else your aircraft is not in compliance with its type certificate. Dave Remove SHIRT to reply directly. |
#118
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Nathan Young wrote:
Most GPS engines are running faster than the display rate. GPS engines from 5-10 years ago operated on 1 or 2 sec position updates. Newer engines are more granular, with 5Hz operation being common. That means the display data shown is typically derived from the velocity/heading calculated from the time 1 and 1.2 seconds in the past. What units have a 5Hz update? The only one I am aware of is the CNX80. I don't know of any others better than 1 Hz... oh, maybe you meant 5 Hz intenally, with a 1 Hz update of the display? Dave Remove SHIRT to reply directly. |
#119
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![]() Dave Butler wrote: Nathan Young wrote: Most GPS engines are running faster than the display rate. GPS engines from 5-10 years ago operated on 1 or 2 sec position updates. Newer engines are more granular, with 5Hz operation being common. That means the display data shown is typically derived from the velocity/heading calculated from the time 1 and 1.2 seconds in the past. What units have a 5Hz update? The only one I am aware of is the CNX80. I don't know of any others better than 1 Hz... oh, maybe you meant 5 Hz intenally, with a 1 Hz update of the display? Oh, never mind. That's what you *said*. Sorry for the noise. Dave |
#120
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