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#11
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![]() "Robert M. Gary" wrote in message om... The local news is reporting that a local CFI (with over 30,000 hours of instruction giving since the early 1960's) ran out of gas just short of the airport after picking up a P210 and flying back from Texas to California. Boy, if it can happen to him, it can happen to anyone. Um, no. It happens to people who fly with too little fuel. It will be interesting to see the final facts. Perhaps the plane was burning way more gas than it should have (the plane had been bought that day). -Robert |
#12
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![]() "PaulH" wrote in message om... There can be plenty of reasons for this besides pilot error. A while back one of my fuel drains developed a slow leak, and there are probably a dozen other possibilities. that is pilot error. You should be able to find that leak - 100LL leaves stains. If it was so slow not to notice, then it should be slow enough not to matter in a flight. There are few fuel problems that are not pilot error. |
#13
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I flew an Archer from BOI to TTD once, and allowing for the headwind, I
planned with 1 hour in reserve. Despite this, I found upon landing that I only had 20 minutes left. The guages worked well enough that while I knew I was low, I also knew I wasn't out, but finding out I had only 20 minutes left was a shocker. Turned out that this particular bird burned more fuel than it should for an unknown reason (club plane). I wished I had known that BEFORE the flight. Anyway, after it went through its next overhaul, it burned the appropriate amount again. Now I know why I never plan on landing with less than 1 hour in the tanks... Dean "Robert M. Gary" wrote in message om... The local news is reporting that a local CFI (with over 30,000 hours of instruction giving since the early 1960's) ran out of gas just short of the airport after picking up a P210 and flying back from Texas to California. Boy, if it can happen to him, it can happen to anyone. It will be interesting to see the final facts. Perhaps the plane was burning way more gas than it should have (the plane had been bought that day). -Robert |
#14
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![]() "Robert M. Gary" wrote in message om... Boy, if it can happen to him, it can happen to anyone. A point that I make constantly to my students and to anyone else who will listen. Never, not for one second, think that just because you are a good pilot or an experienced pilot that you will not make mistakes. |
#15
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#17
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![]() "NW_PILOT" wrote in message ... Maybe they get to relaxed and over confident? It is called "complacency," but I think there is more to it than that. If you play roulette long enough, sooner or later your number is going to come up. |
#18
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"C J Campbell" wrote in message
... "NW_PILOT" wrote in message ... Maybe they get to relaxed and over confident? It is called "complacency," but I think there is more to it than that. If you play roulette long enough, sooner or later your number is going to come up. Figure in as well, most 10,000+ hour pilots are flying professionally at least in some way or another. As such, they're also flying much more per year than other pilots. This dramatically increases their exposure to said risk. I guess another way of saying it is, I'm guessing that the small percentage of 10,000+ hour pilots that are out there account for way more than 10% if the annual flying hours. |
#19
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I believe that it is a huge mistake to teaach student pilots that at a
given power setting their aircraft will average x gallons per hour. My 172 averages 8 gallons per hour. About 18 months ago, on a 2.5 hour flight it averaged 12 gallons per hour. - Fortunately I had full tanks on takeoff. 6 months ago the same thing happened - fuel consumption went from 8 gallons per hour to 12 gallons per hour. again I was lucky - I had departed with full tanks. On both occasions it was the same problem. A seal had failed on one of my fuel caps and the fuel was siphoning out when airborne. We KNOW that this can and does happen. So why do we continue to tell students that if they plan for 8 GPH they will be safe? It simply isn't true, and it is going to kill someone. How many students are taught to dip the tanks AFTER they land? None. And, as most of them are renting, they go away happily believing that they burned 8 gph - so they continue to plan that way - even if they are actually burning a lot more. So - to all of the instructors out there - why not just teach them to never trust anything, and if they regularly rent the same aircraft, dip tanks before and after, so they KNOW the fuel consumption, rather than continue to operate on some totally arbitrary figure based on a new aircraft, rather that the 30 year old junker that they actually fly. OK. Pet peeve over. We now retun you to your regular programming ![]() Tony -- Tony Roberts PP-ASEL VFR OTT Night Cessna 172H C-GICE In article , (Robert M. Gary) wrote: The local news is reporting that a local CFI (with over 30,000 hours of instruction giving since the early 1960's) ran out of gas just short of the airport after picking up a P210 and flying back from Texas to California. Boy, if it can happen to him, it can happen to anyone. It will be interesting to see the final facts. Perhaps the plane was burning way more gas than it should have (the plane had been bought that day). -Robert -- Tony Roberts PP-ASEL VFR OTT Night Cessna 172H C-GICE |
#20
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tony roberts wrote:
I believe that it is a huge mistake to teaach student pilots that at a given power setting their aircraft will average x gallons per hour. so what would you teach them? If you dipped before and after and noticed the fuel consumption all over the place, they still rent and can only do it by the book plus a safety margin. That safety margin can't be 50% like your 8 to 12 gph otherwise we'd never get a XC in as we'd always be stopping for fuel every 5nm. The only way around this is to have reliable and accurate gauges. I still don't know why it is that difficult to make these. Gerald |
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