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#51
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#52
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#54
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wrote:
In rec.aviation.owning Jay Maynard wrote: On 2008-02-21, wrote: I never use the fuel gauges for anything other than passing reference, since we do everything by visual inspection and the timer in our Garmin GTX-327 transponder. How do visual inspection or your timer tell you if you've got an in- flight fuel leak? That's an important reason for the fuel-gauge requirement. How does a fuel gauge that's so unreliable that you can't trust it to within a quarter tank tell you whether you've got a fuel leak? That description applies to every aircraft I flew during my primary training, late 1970s vintage Cessna and Piper and Grumman products (this was in the late 1980s). I was taught to verify the tank's level on preflight, and use time and consumption per hour to figure usage. 23.1337(b) Fuel quantity indication. There must be a means to indicate to the flightcrew members the quantity of usable fuel in each tank during flight. An indicator calibrated in appropriate units and clearly marked to indicate those units must be used... 23.1337(b)(1) Each fuel quantity indicator must be calibrated to read "zero" during level flight when the quantity of fuel remaining in the tank is equal to the unusable fuel supply... 91.205 Powered civil aircraft with standard category U.S. airworthiness certificates: Instrument and equipment requirements. (a) General. Except as provided in paragraphs (c)(3) and (e) of this section, no person may operate a powered civil aircraft with a standard category U.S. airworthiness certificate in any operation described in paragraphs (b) through (f) of this section unless that aircraft contains the instruments and equipment specified in those paragraphs (or FAA-approved equivalents) for that type of operation, and those instruments and items of equipment are in operable condition. (b) Visual-flight rules (day). For VFR flight during the day, the following instruments and equipment are required: ... (9) Fuel gauge indicating the quantity of fuel in each tank. If "you can't trust it to within a quarter tank", you should probably get it fixed. Yeah, I know, it is common and nobody seems to care, but that isn't what the regs say. |
#55
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Jay Maynard wrote:
Why is it so remarkable that the fuel gauges in the new aircraft I'm looking at are actually considered reliable? I've hear dlots of comments to that effect. "Hey, fuel gauges you can believe! Wow!" Exactly. G I know what the regs say, but I also fly actual aircraft, not theoretical or paper versions. |
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On Feb 22, 6:01*am, Peter Clark
wrote: Yup, no disagreement. I just meant that an inop gauge (in addition to a legal, working one for the same tank) doesn't automatically violate 91.205b9. It would if that working guage isn't TSO'd as a primary guage and/or two factory installed guages are called out by the equipment list and/or KOEL. Agreed. (By 'automatically' I meant 'necessarily'. Sorry for my imprecision.) |
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On Feb 22, 4:12*am, Bob Noel
wrote: You keep talking about detecting a leak. *Have you flown a comanche? Do you consider the pa-24-260 to be unsafe because the fuel gauge can only read one tank at a time? * Why would reading just one tank at a time make it unsafe? Even with both displayed simultaneously, I generally read one, then the other-- one at a time. |
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On Feb 22, 4:07*am, Bob Noel
wrote: often? *How often would not having anti-collision lights translate to real death? *How often would not having an ELT translate to real death? Ok, maybe not often. But if the stakes are high enough, infrequent events are still important. Most pilots never experience an engine failure, for example, but that doesn't make it unimportant to know how to handle one. Same principle for required equipment. On a calm, clear day, I could fly a plane without any working instruments whatsoever (including powerplant instruments) and it's overwhelmingly likely that I'd be fine. But I wouldn't do it, and I certainly wouldn't mistake such a plane for being airworthy. |
#59
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![]() wrote in message ... On Feb 21, 10:36 pm, "Dave Stadt" wrote: Mine bounce around so much they are useless. Then your plane isn't airworthy. Wrong! They work exactly as designed and as installed by the manufacturer. Often times book learnin doesn't transulate to real life. Perhaps not. But flying without basic required equipment often translates to real death. |
#60
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![]() "B A R R Y" wrote in message et... Jay Maynard wrote: On 2008-02-21, wrote: I never use the fuel gauges for anything other than passing reference, since we do everything by visual inspection and the timer in our Garmin GTX-327 transponder. How do visual inspection or your timer tell you if you've got an in- flight fuel leak? That's an important reason for the fuel-gauge requirement. How does a fuel gauge that's so unreliable that you can't trust it to within a quarter tank tell you whether you've got a fuel leak? That description applies to every aircraft I flew during my primary training, late 1970s vintage Cessna and Piper and Grumman products (this was in the late 1980s). I was taught to verify the tank's level on preflight, and use time and consumption per hour to figure usage. That's my point. Is "Airplane Sense" a simmer? G He certainly has not flown very many types of aircraft if he puts any trust in fuel gages. |
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