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#11
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![]() On 6-Apr-2005, "Paul kgyy" wrote: Enjoy the Arrow - it's one of the great airplanes. Be thankful for that free-fall landing gear. I landed with 2 green last year when one of the squat switch wires broke from old age - strong pucker factor. Exactly the same thing happened to me in our Arrow IV. What made it interesting is that it happened when I lowered the gear to slow down in the looooong line of airplanes headed in to land at OSH. -- -Elliott Drucker |
#12
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![]() On 6-Apr-2005, "Tony" wrote: I'd fly away half the tank I took off on, switch over, and take most of the fuel off the other tank. An Arrow will get pretty wing-heavy with one tank full and the other at half. This is particularly true on newer Arrows with 72 gallons usable fuel. What I do is fly for 45 min on the "takeoff" tank and then switch every hour. Keeps the fuel load balanced within a few gallons. -- -Elliott Drucker |
#13
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Morgans wrote:
"Ross Richardson" wrote How did you find the performance, TAS, fuel burn, etc? Ross - be kind to dialup users; trim your responses. You sent a 6kb post for less than 1kb of response. Thanks. Yes, sorry about that. I will do better. Ross |
#14
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![]() "Steve Foley" wrote in message news:JuS4e.23$Xm3.18@trndny01... I burn fuel from the tank that the minute hand on my clock is pointing to. That way I can always tell by looking if I remembered to switch tanks last 1/2 hour. My tie-down is fifty feet from the runway. I don't switch tanks on the ground for this reason. I'd hate to switch to a bad one only to find out at 100' that it's bad. I'd rather find out 1/2 hour later, at several thousand feet. My opinion will probably change the first time I find bad gas in one of my tanks. One little trick I learned after picking an airplane up from a hayfield because the fuel selector shaft broke. Never switch fuel tanks unless you can see a place to land about one minute ahead! :-) Airports are best, but any good field will do. Highflyer Highflight Aviation Services Pinckneyville Airport ( PJY ) |
#15
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Just curious, Jack: How did an Arrow owned by this guy in North
Carolina end up for sale out in Denver? ************************************************** * N-number : N2104T Aircraft Serial Number : 28R-7135048 Aircraft Manufacturer : PIPER Model : PA-28R-200 Engine Manufacturer : LYCOMING Model : I0360 SER Aircraft Year : 1971 Owner Name : PHILLIPS DAVID T Owner Address : PO BOX 720 KENANSVILLE, NC, 28349-0720 Type of Owner : Individual Registration Date : 22-Nov-1999 Airworthiness Certificate Type : Standard Approved Operations : Normal ******************************************** -- Jay Honeck Iowa City, IA Pathfinder N56993 www.AlexisParkInn.com "Your Aviation Destination" |
#16
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In article .com, Tony wrote:
have been in the owner's manual that said something like "switch to most full fuel tank" before takeoff, and after run-up. That's the worst possible time to change tanks. Ack. Have to agree with you, but I think you misread the instructions. I start and taxi on one tank, then run up on the other with takeoff on the same tank as the runup. That way, you know you have good fuel in both tanks. Morris |
#17
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![]() Jack Allison wrote: Saturday: Flew commercially from Sacramento to Denver and had my first chance to lay eyes on N2104T, located at Front Range airport. Do you live near Sacramento? I live in Sacramento. When I saw that N number I went searching. Turns out that I did some teaching in N2105T (one number different) out of Cameron Park several years ago. Enjoy your new airplane. If you need any advice on good and bad shops in the area (we certainly have both) let me know! -Robert, CFI M20 owner |
#18
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![]() In article .com, Tony wrote: have been in the owner's manual that said something like "switch to most full fuel tank" before takeoff, and after run-up. That's the worst possible time to change tanks. How long would the engine run if you selected an empty tank? My 182 doesn't even go 30 seconds at idle after I turn the gas off. |
#19
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One well known aviation university teaches you to "fly out on the tank
you flew in on". The theory being that takeoff is not the time to "test" whether a tank you just switched to is blocked, the fuel valve malfunctioned, a tank is empty (cuz you forgot to check it), a tank you just switched to is full of water, etc. If you switch just prior to takeoff or just prior to runup, you have about 1 or 2 minutes of flight until the carb bowl and gascolator empties in a small Piper. Then, you get an empty fuel line or whatever was in the other tank. Usually, you are not in a very good position to deal with no fuel or contaminated fuel at the end of that short time period. Opinions on this one vary. I leave the valve where it is and switch after burning off about 5 gallons (climb to 2500' plus 10 minutes of cruise). Good Luck, Mike Journeyman wrote: In article .com, Tony wrote: have been in the owner's manual that said something like "switch to most full fuel tank" before takeoff, and after run-up. That's the worst possible time to change tanks. Ack. Have to agree with you, but I think you misread the instructions. I start and taxi on one tank, then run up on the other with takeoff on the same tank as the runup. That way, you know you have good fuel in both tanks. Morris __________________________________________________ _____________________________ Posted Via Uncensored-News.Com - Accounts Starting At $6.95 - http://www.uncensored-news.com The Worlds Uncensored News Source |
#20
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"Mike Spera" wrote in message ...
Opinions on this one vary. I leave the valve where it is and switch after burning off about 5 gallons (climb to 2500' plus 10 minutes of cruise). For my first tank switch, I like to be over something that I wouldn't mind landing on or at a high enough altitude that having the engine stop would not be too exciting of an experience... Subsequent switches, I'm not as paranoid about... |
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