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#131
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Tweaking the throttle on approach
"Ron Natalie" wrote in message
... Mxsmanic wrote: ... You've never flown a baron. Stop lying. Real pilots who haven't caught on to your bull**** and lies might be dangerously confused. ... We really aren't that stupid. -- Geoff The Sea Hawk at Wow Way d0t Com remove spaces and make the obvious substitutions to reply by mail When immigration is outlawed, only outlaws will immigrate. |
#132
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Tweaking the throttle on approach
On Mar 14, 10:23 am, Mxsmanic wrote:
I'd prefer a system that allows me to draw fuel symmetrically from tanks on both sides of the aircraft. That way imbalance is one less thing that I'd have to worry about. In my plane, that imbalance is not an issue. I start by flying 30 minutes on one side, then switch to the other side for 60 minutes, then back for another 60 minutes. 30 minutes of imbalance is about 5 gallons (30 lbs) and not noticeable to me. A bigger worry is not remembering to change tanks and then running a tank dry at low altitude, might be on the ground before figuring out what's wrong. 2. Condensation rarely is the problem. The real problem is poorly sealing fuel caps. You just said they couldn't be sealed, so how is this a problem? I think he means rain being driven into the tank past poor seals on the fuel caps. I see this occasionally on my plane. But I get very little, if any, condensation. All tanks that I know of on small planes have a vent somewhere to let air in, so that the fuel will come out. |
#133
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Tweaking the throttle on approach
On Mar 15, 11:47 am, wrote:
On Mar 14, 10:23 am, Mxsmanic wrote: I'd prefer a system that allows me to draw fuel symmetrically from tanks on both sides of the aircraft. That way imbalance is one less thing that I'd have to worry about. In my plane, that imbalance is not an issue. I start by flying 30 minutes on one side, then switch to the other side for 60 minutes, then back for another 60 minutes. 30 minutes of imbalance is about 5 gallons (30 lbs) and not noticeable to me. A bigger worry is not remembering to change tanks and then running a tank dry at low altitude, might be on the ground before figuring out what's wrong. On my Garmin 96 there is a built in fuel timer - set it for however many minutes you want between changes and it somehow knows when you're flying and when you're not, and lets you know when a tank change is due. 2. Condensation rarely is the problem. The real problem is poorly sealing fuel caps. You just said they couldn't be sealed, so how is this a problem? I think he means rain being driven into the tank past poor seals on the fuel caps. I see this occasionally on my plane. But I get very little, if any, condensation. All tanks that I know of on small planes have a vent somewhere to let air in, so that the fuel will come out. One of the club planes I fly must have a dodgy seal on one of the fuel tank caps - I always seem to get a bubble of water when sampling from one tank but never the other.. |
#134
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Tweaking the throttle on approach
"Gary" wrote in message
ups.com... first. There are reasons why kids learn to read with books from Dr. Seuss rather than Dr. Salk, why the first science class offered in elementary school isn't quantum physics; why you can't go from junior That's not a bad place to leave it. Sims are not an unreasonable first step, just as Sam I Am makes for a companionable reading primer. The skills and decision making transfer directly. Some don't progress much beyond flipping pages and looking at the primary color illustrations, but others have returned in later life to study his use of anapestic tetrameter. You get out of it what you put into it. It can be a little. It can be a lot. |
#135
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Tweaking the throttle on approach
On Wed, 14 Mar 2007 08:54:41 -0400, Ron Natalie
wrote: Mxsmanic wrote: A flight in the sim takes the same time as its real-life counterpart, though. Bull****. I don't have to preflight the simulator, or pull it from the hangar, or preheat it, or get it started, or call for the fuel truck or any of the hundred things that REAL pilots have to deal with with flying REAL airplanes that you'll never experience in your pathetic little fantasy world. Don't lecture real pilots (or those who are attempting to become real pilots) from your distorted self-interested masturbation. You missed a rough run-up where you make the go-nogo decision, the taxi back to the hangar, wait for the engine to cool enough to handle the plugs which are almost impossible to get at, then spend the better part of another hour cleaning the lead out of the plugs. (Did that last week) I think so. If you can learn all the complex and HP stuff _eventually_, then that also means that you can learn it right up front. It might seem more daunting at first than a simple aircraft, but the overall elapsed time to become proficient in the complex aircraft would be the same in both situations. Again you have no clue. The some of the time will be longer as you waste time initially being behind the complex aircraft which will entail more instruction time than if you started simple and worked up. After you get competence in the simple aircraft, adding the control of the complex is trivial. It even confuses a pilot with many hundreds of hours in a 172 or Cherokee. :-)) Like many things it's easy once you've done it, or it looks easy if you haven't. On a high wing aircraft, the fuel system is gravity fed, and you have a fuel selector with L / R / Both choices. Leave it on Both and you're set. Sounds good to me. It shouldn't. If you bothered to study anything, the above isn't valid for even Cessnas. Cessna recommends operating in LEFT or RIGHT at high altitudes. I'm not going to go into the reasons because your game doesn't vapor lock. Low wing aircraft (Cherokee specifically) do not have a Both option. You have Left or Right, and it's up to the pilot to manage his fuel. For instance, you start on least full tank, switch to fullest before takeoff. Every 30 minutes, for instance, you need to switch tanks, or risk a weight imbalance, or at worst, engine failure due to fuel starvation. Wow ... sounds incredibly primitive. I guess crossfeeds and stuff like that are still future science-fiction for small aircraft. I wonder what he thinks of a plane where you have to pump gas from front to back in flight to keep the CG where you want it?. Primitive? :-)) No more science fiction than your pathetic brain. My aircraft is a low wing and has a both position on the fuel selector and tip tank crossfeeds for a long time. But it adds weight, complexity and things that may go wrong just as easily as forgetting to switch tanks. In a twin, though, you have one tank per engine, so you should be able to feed the right engine with the right tank, and the left with the left tank. Again, your pathatic idealized world doesn't correspond to reality. Do you think the fuel flow on each engine is identical? Do you think the line guy filled both tanks to the same level? And then look at all the tanks they have in a modern airliners. I've gotten pretty low in the tanks in the Baron and I've never had to switch tanks. The only time I've ever had to touch it was for engine failure, in which case I obviously direct both tanks to the non-failing engine. You've never flown a baron. Stop lying. Real pilots who haven't caught on to your bull**** and lies might be dangerously confused. Or just dangerous. Point taken. But I have read that it's good practice to keep plenty of fuel in the tanks when possible, not only to maximum your reserves but also to help exclude condensation (I guess small aircraft haven't discovered airtight seals yet, either). Again your pathetic ignorance is showing. If you bothered to actually study things rather than basing the entire world on what you can observe of Microsoft's simplification of flight you'd know that: 1. The tanks can't be sealed. As fuel goes out, air must go in (either that or you'll have to have fuel tanks like a playtex baby bottle with a collapsing bladder. 2. Condensation rarely is the problem. The real problem is poorly sealing fuel caps. I took off one day when one of the "old" or maybe I should say *OLD* O rings let go. Man, It looked like a contrail, but it was nothing compared to the day when I did a short field TO and rotated abruptly at the intersection of our two runways which is considerably higher than the the rest of 18/38. The filler caps were getting tired on the tip tanks and they both let go at the same instant. Those 15 gallon tanks were *dry* after just going around and staying in tight. They were probably dry by the time I turned cross wind. Interesting. Full flaps on the Baron do create a lot of drag, but the "approach" setting creates far less. It's a poor speedbrake--the gear works better for that (but has a lower maximum speed). When I extend the flaps in the Baron, I rise very noticeably, then I slow down significantly and I start to lose altitude; with full flaps, there's a noticeable tendency to pitch down, too. But I'm expecting all this so I adjust for it. Again, stop lying. You've never flown a Baron. You don't know how they behave aerdodynamically. Is it a good aircraft? I've heard stories about Pipers. Stories is all you've heard about anything. How far above the runway? And you don't stall or get a tail strike? Neither. If you bothered to learn something about ground handling in wind you'd know these things. It's the first thing that REAL pilots do in an airplane. In the Baron I don't think I've ever pulled the yoke all the way back. I stay almost level until I'm very close indeed to the runway, then pull back on power a bit and flare. No idle and no full back stick, though. I haven't actually tried that, but from the way the Baron behaves my intuition tells me it wouldn't be suitable. You've never flown a Baron, and you've never pulled a real yoke back. I heard that you run out of elevator authority if you get too slow but that's only a guess... Possibly. I'm usually at least 10 kts above stall speed so I don't really know (or maybe you are not talking about a Baron?). Maybe he's talking about a real Baron and not your pathetic fantasy. ' Roger Halstead (K8RI & ARRL life member) (N833R, S# CD-2 Worlds oldest Debonair) www.rogerhalstead.com |
#136
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Tweaking the throttle on approach
It's worth remembering that once basic aircraft control, navigation,
and communication are taught, most of the flight instruction one gets for PP or IR is related to dealing with what I'll call adverse events. We had been taught how to recognize instrument failure and what to do about it, engine failure and what to do about it, pilot error and what to do about it, getting into an unusual attitude and what to do about it, what the airplane feels like and might do if we're close to an edge (too low and too slow because the low level wind is much greater than expected because it's a first gust on final comes to mind) -- the list goes on and on. If one sets 'realism' to high in a sim, does one get those kinds of failures as often as they might happen with a general aviation aircraft? Does the weather go marginal, does ice grow on the wings, vac pumps fail, those sort of things that most of us who have been pilots for a few hundred hours have experienced? Oh? you can get them in a sim if you program them in? Actual airplanes do allow us to simulate emergencies, but in real life sometimes it's not a simulation. On Mar 16, 2:34 am, Roger wrote: On Wed, 14 Mar 2007 08:54:41 -0400, Ron Natalie wrote: Mxsmanic wrote: A flight in the sim takes the same time as its real-life counterpart, though. Bull****. I don't have to preflight the simulator, or pull it from the hangar, or preheat it, or get it started, or call for the fuel truck or any of the hundred things that REAL pilots have to deal with with flying REAL airplanes that you'll never experience in your pathetic little fantasy world. Don't lecture real pilots (or those who are attempting to become real pilots) from your distorted self-interested masturbation. You missed a rough run-up where you make the go-nogo decision, the taxi back to the hangar, wait for the engine to cool enough to handle the plugs which are almost impossible to get at, then spend the better part of another hour cleaning the lead out of the plugs. (Did that last week) I think so. If you can learn all the complex and HP stuff _eventually_, then that also means that you can learn it right up front. It might seem more daunting at first than a simple aircraft, but the overall elapsed time to become proficient in the complex aircraft would be the same in both situations. Again you have no clue. The some of the time will be longer as you waste time initially being behind the complex aircraft which will entail more instruction time than if you started simple and worked up. After you get competence in the simple aircraft, adding the control of the complex is trivial. It even confuses a pilot with many hundreds of hours in a 172 or Cherokee. :-)) Like many things it's easy once you've done it, or it looks easy if you haven't. On a high wing aircraft, the fuel system is gravity fed, and you have a fuel selector with L / R / Both choices. Leave it on Both and you're set. Sounds good to me. It shouldn't. If you bothered to study anything, the above isn't valid for even Cessnas. Cessna recommends operating in LEFT or RIGHT at high altitudes. I'm not going to go into the reasons because your game doesn't vapor lock. Low wing aircraft (Cherokee specifically) do not have a Both option. You have Left or Right, and it's up to the pilot to manage his fuel. For instance, you start on least full tank, switch to fullest before takeoff. Every 30 minutes, for instance, you need to switch tanks, or risk a weight imbalance, or at worst, engine failure due to fuel starvation. Wow ... sounds incredibly primitive. I guess crossfeeds and stuff like that are still future science-fiction for small aircraft. I wonder what he thinks of a plane where you have to pump gas from front to back in flight to keep the CG where you want it?. Primitive? :-)) No more science fiction than your pathetic brain. My aircraft is a low wing and has a both position on the fuel selector and tip tank crossfeeds for a long time. But it adds weight, complexity and things that may go wrong just as easily as forgetting to switch tanks. In a twin, though, you have one tank per engine, so you should be able to feed the right engine with the right tank, and the left with the left tank. Again, your pathatic idealized world doesn't correspond to reality. Do you think the fuel flow on each engine is identical? Do you think the line guy filled both tanks to the same level? And then look at all the tanks they have in a modern airliners. I've gotten pretty low in the tanks in the Baron and I've never had to switch tanks. The only time I've ever had to touch it was for engine failure, in which case I obviously direct both tanks to the non-failing engine. You've never flown a baron. Stop lying. Real pilots who haven't caught on to your bull**** and lies might be dangerously confused. Or just dangerous. Point taken. But I have read that it's good practice to keep plenty of fuel in the tanks when possible, not only to maximum your reserves but also to help exclude condensation (I guess small aircraft haven't discovered airtight seals yet, either). Again your pathetic ignorance is showing. If you bothered to actually study things rather than basing the entire world on what you can observe of Microsoft's simplification of flight you'd know that: 1. The tanks can't be sealed. As fuel goes out, air must go in (either that or you'll have to have fuel tanks like a playtex baby bottle with a collapsing bladder. 2. Condensation rarely is the problem. The real problem is poorly sealing fuel caps. I took off one day when one of the "old" or maybe I should say *OLD* O rings let go. Man, It looked like a contrail, but it was nothing compared to the day when I did a short field TO and rotated abruptly at the intersection of our two runways which is considerably higher than the the rest of 18/38. The filler caps were getting tired on the tip tanks and they both let go at the same instant. Those 15 gallon tanks were *dry* after just going around and staying in tight. They were probably dry by the time I turned cross wind. Interesting. Full flaps on the Baron do create a lot of drag, but the "approach" setting creates far less. It's a poor speedbrake--the gear works better for that (but has a lower maximum speed). When I extend the flaps in the Baron, I rise very noticeably, then I slow down significantly and I start to lose altitude; with full flaps, there's a noticeable tendency to pitch down, too. But I'm expecting all this so I adjust for it. Again, stop lying. You've never flown a Baron. You don't know how they behave aerdodynamically. Is it a good aircraft? I've heard stories about Pipers. Stories is all you've heard about anything. How far above the runway? And you don't stall or get a tail strike? Neither. If you bothered to learn something about ground handling in wind you'd know these things. It's the first thing that REAL pilots do in an airplane. In the Baron I don't think I've ever pulled the yoke all the way back. I stay almost level until I'm very close indeed to the runway, then pull back on power a bit and flare. No idle and no full back stick, though. I haven't actually tried that, but from the way the Baron behaves my intuition tells me it wouldn't be suitable. You've never flown a Baron, and you've never pulled a real yoke back. I heard that you run out of elevator authority if you get too slow but that's only a guess... Possibly. I'm usually at least 10 kts above stall speed so I don't really know (or maybe you are not talking about a Baron?). Maybe he's talking about a real Baron and not your pathetic fantasy. ' Roger Halstead (K8RI & ARRL life member) (N833R, S# CD-2 Worlds oldest Debonair)www.rogerhalstead.com- Hide quoted text - - Show quoted text -- Hide quoted text - - Show quoted text -- Hide quoted text - - Show quoted text - |
#137
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Tweaking the throttle on approach
On Mar 14, 8:10 pm, "chris" wrote:
On my Garmin 96 there is a built in fuel timer - set it for however many minutes you want between changes and it somehow knows when you're flying and when you're not, and lets you know when a tank change is due. My 196 has a similar feature, although I usually use a separate timer, or just put a mark on my flight plan when I should switch. What a REALLY want is just a simple countdown-type timer that signals when time is up by flashing a large bright light that I can't miss, similar to the big red stall warning light on the instrument panel of my Cherokee. I've never found one for sale, but I've thought about trying to construct one with my rudimentary electronics skills and a bunch of Radio Shark parts. |
#138
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Tweaking the throttle on approach
Roger writes:
I wonder what he thinks of a plane where you have to pump gas from front to back in flight to keep the CG where you want it?. Primitive? The Concorde was a special case, although it was primitive by today's standards. And then look at all the tanks they have in a modern airliners. And the increasing automation in their management. -- Transpose mxsmanic and gmail to reach me by e-mail. |
#139
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Tweaking the throttle on approach
Tony writes:
If one sets 'realism' to high in a sim, does one get those kinds of failures as often as they might happen with a general aviation aircraft? Simulators (including MSFS) usually allow failures to be adjusted independently of overall realism. So you can have anything from a 100% reliable aircraft to one that experiences multiple catastrophic failures even before pushback. Many types of failures are so impractical or dangerous to practice in real life that they can only be experienced safely and economically in a simulator. Does the weather go marginal, does ice grow on the wings, vac pumps fail, those sort of things that most of us who have been pilots for a few hundred hours have experienced? This is also controllable in a sim. Oh? you can get them in a sim if you program them in? It's a parameter setting rather than a programming problem. Actual airplanes do allow us to simulate emergencies, but in real life sometimes it's not a simulation. The most critical emergencies cannot be practiced outside of a simulator, because they are too dangerous or expensive. You either learn to handle them in a simulator, or you don't learn to handle them. Airline pilots practice engine failures regularly in simulators, even though most of them will never see a real-world engine failure during their careers. -- Transpose mxsmanic and gmail to reach me by e-mail. |
#140
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Mx: Tweaking the throttle on approach
Mxsmanic wrote in
: EridanMan writes: Its called 'pilot workload'. In a real aircraft, you must: -Fly the Plane -Operate The Aircraft Systems -Keep track of your current location -Communicate with ATC -Keep Watch for Traffic -Plan your future track (or reference your flightplan), this includes making absolutely sure you remain clear of all restricted airspace. All in a reasonably loud, chaotic setting, with absolutely no option to 'pause'... Sounds doable, with a bit of practice. I don't have much trouble with it in the sim. Snort! Bertie |
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