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#1
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From what I understand, icing protection should be turned on if the
outside temperature is 5° C or less. However, what is the reason for not having it on all the time? Does it overheat in normal weather, or what? I read that turning on icing protection before "sufficient ice has accumulated" may prevent the protection from working to remove the ice. Why? Also, what types of anti-icing stuff should I turn on? Just everything that deals with ice (wing, prop, pitot, fuel vent, etc.), or is there an accepted order or hierarchy for these things? -- Transpose mxsmanic and gmail to reach me by e-mail. |
#2
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![]() Mxsmanic wrote: From what I understand, icing protection should be turned on if the outside temperature is 5° C or less. Also, what types of anti-icing stuff should I turn on? Just turn up the heat in the room where you run your simulator, and you'll be fine. |
#3
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Air temperature changes with air pressure changes inside
engines and also around the wing and tail surfaces. Also, temperature probes are not 100% accurate, so the +5°CF is to provide a cushion. Exactly what is turned ON depends on the airplane and the type of ice protection installed. It is important, something as simple as a temperature probe also needs to be anti-iced to prevent any ice accumulation. Other systems do de-icing, allowing some ice build-up and then removing that. King Air using P&W PT6 engines have ice deflector vanes that deflect water and ice particles from the air going into the engine. The intake lip on older King Airs had an electric heating element, newer designs are heated by engine exhaust being routed through a hot lip which gets hot any time the engine is running. Jet engines produce a lot of hot air by compression inside the engine before the combustion section. Some of that hot air is bled away and used to heat the air inlet to the engine, electricity may be used to heat temperature probes in the inlet. Smaller engines don't have as much hot bleed air available, so they may use bleed air only for the air intake and cabin pressure/environmental while a big airliner probably uses bleed air for engines, wings, tail and other areas. Some airplanes with multi-disc brakes may use a hot air distribution manifold to send hot air to the brake assembly so that the brakes are not frozen, this is turned on a few minutes before landing and during taxiing in water and slush/snow and is usually on a timer so it turns off automatically about 10 minutes after gear retraction [the switch then needs to be manual turned off to reset the system for landing]. Pitot and windshield heat, are OK to run all the time in flight, but if pitot heat is used on the ground for a long period, the chrome will turn a pretty purple, so test it on the ground [don't burn your hand] and then turn it on before take-off. Too many systems to explain here, read the POH or a good training manual. "Gary" wrote in message oups.com... Mxsmanic wrote: From what I understand, icing protection should be turned on if the outside temperature is 5° C or less. Also, what types of anti-icing stuff should I turn on? Just turn up the heat in the room where you run your simulator, and you'll be fine. |
#4
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"Jim Macklin" wrote in
: Too many systems to explain here, read the POH or a good training manual. Talk about wasted advise..... Mx doesn't even read the replies, much less anything he's been shown to read like references or POHs. Allen |
#5
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I know, I know, but there are other real students out there
who might benefit. Just think if the Air Florida 737 pilot had turned his engine anti-ice on before take-off a Washington National, CNN wouldn't have had all those videos of the water rescues and dead people. "A Lieberma" wrote in message . 18... | "Jim Macklin" wrote in | : | | Too many systems to explain here, read the POH or a good | training manual. | | Talk about wasted advise..... | | Mx doesn't even read the replies, much less anything he's been shown to | read like references or POHs. | | Allen |
#6
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I am not sure why you guys are beating up the guy. He may not be a real
pilot, but I have not found his questions to be offensive, off-topic or even ignorant. To the contrary, he has posed several questions in the past that many of us were unable to answer, or revealed lack of knowledge on our part. In those cases, it is the real pilots who I have seen to misbehave. I can't recall Mxsmanic to have lost his cool despite all the things that poeple call him. A Lieberma wrote: "Jim Macklin" wrote in : Too many systems to explain here, read the POH or a good training manual. Talk about wasted advise..... Mx doesn't even read the replies, much less anything he's been shown to read like references or POHs. Allen |
#7
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![]() "Andrew Sarangan" wrote in message oups.com... I am not sure why you guys are beating up the guy. He may not be a real pilot, but I have not found his questions to be offensive, off-topic or even ignorant. To the contrary, he has posed several questions in the past that many of us were unable to answer, or revealed lack of knowledge on our part. In those cases, it is the real pilots who I have seen to misbehave. I can't recall Mxsmanic to have lost his cool despite all the things that poeple call him. It's not his questions that we have a problem with. It his responses to the answers he receives. |
#8
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Andrew Sarangan schrieb:
I am not sure why you guys are beating up the guy. It's called the lemmings syndrome. It feels good to be part of a crowd, it warms the soul to pat on each other's shoulders and last but not leat it gives a sweet feeling to beat and kick an outsider, especially as part of a group. Now if you can get all those positive feelings with a single short post, then Usenet saves you a lot on psychiatrist fees. Stefan |
#9
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I have to agree Andrew..
I am convinced thatr somewhere behind "Mxmaniac" must be a tolerant gentleman... I "tolerated" a lot of questions from a guy about 6 months ago. He was flying a sim... And the questions would fall into the "stupid" category within some opinions here... So I showed him around our Warrior, let him sit in the left seat... (1st time in a light plane). He recognised all the instruments, controls and functions... I saw him at the airport 3 months later.. He had signed up for pilot training and was working on landings ( at about 6 hrs)..... So I will take a chance on another who may become a "real" pilot someday...if they show an interest in aviation... OK, maybe I just have a thick skin, or I just don't take myself very seriously... If anybody offends me, I just ignore them....they fade away after a while... Mx has not offended me... And I am NOT going to impress my opinion on others. I am not going to encourage others to respond to him, and I must confess I am beginning to tire of others (more than) suggesting that I (we) NOT respond to him. If anyone in this group offends me, I will determine it was not a misunderstanding, make them aware, and move on. I feel no need to blacklist anyone. It was 30 some years ago when I was pumping "stupid" questions to a pilot.. I am glad he was patient and encouraged me to keep dreaming. But it was still some time before I could afford to train to become a "real" pilot. Cheers! Dave , I just move on On 29 Nov 2006 13:39:38 -0800, "Andrew Sarangan" wrote: I am not sure why you guys are beating up the guy. He may not be a real pilot, but I have not found his questions to be offensive, off-topic or even ignorant. To the contrary, he has posed several questions in the past that many of us were unable to answer, or revealed lack of knowledge on our part. In those cases, it is the real pilots who I have seen to misbehave. I can't recall Mxsmanic to have lost his cool despite all the things that poeple call him. A Lieberma wrote: "Jim Macklin" wrote in : Too many systems to explain here, read the POH or a good training manual. Talk about wasted advise..... Mx doesn't even read the replies, much less anything he's been shown to read like references or POHs. Allen |
#10
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"Jim Macklin" writes:
Exactly what is turned ON depends on the airplane and the type of ice protection installed. In the Baron (simulated), I have Pitot Heat, Fuel Vent Heat, Stall Warn Heat, Prop, Windshield, and Surface. I can figure out what they all do except "Surface" (leading edge heat or something?), but I'm not sure which ones can be left on under what conditions. The manual only mentions "Ice Protection Systems - as required" in a checklist, but does not explain what they are for (the sim manual is presumably more limited than the real one, although some portions are taken directly out of the real one). I've only experienced icing once in the sim, when the pitot tube froze up. I haven't really figured out how to configure the sim to guarantee that I have ice. It's on my list of things to practice. Pitot and windshield heat, are OK to run all the time in flight, but if pitot heat is used on the ground for a long period, the chrome will turn a pretty purple, so test it on the ground [don't burn your hand] and then turn it on before take-off. Is there a thermostat or something in ice protection hardware to keep it from overheating if it isn't really that cold outside? -- Transpose mxsmanic and gmail to reach me by e-mail. |
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