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#1
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Gents,
Though this is not strictly an IFR question, I am pretty sure that you have opinions that I would like to get. Subject is Lycoming O-360 engines. I have flown behind a number of them in Pipers and the POH instruction on carb heat is always "as required." Specifically there is no requirement for carb heat on the landing checklist. This makes sense to me as the intake charge is routed through the oil pan cum intake manifold and, with the throttle nearly closed hence low flow velocity, should get adequately warmed up. At least that is my rationale for why the POH does not call for heat. I am about to get checked out in a Civil Air Patrol 172 that has an STC'd O-360 installed in place of the original Lycoming O-320. The 172 POH wants carb heat on approach. This makes no sense to me. If I have to do a go around it is just one more workload item/one more thing to forget and, from my Piper experience, it does not appear to be necessary. My guess, without benefit of any actual facts, is that this POH requirement comes from Cessna's Continental roots and has no engineering justification. So it seems wise to ignore it. Comments? (Please, let's not go to the FARS with this question. That is not my interest.) |
#2
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Mitty wrote:
I am about to get checked out in a Civil Air Patrol 172 that has an STC'd O-360 installed in place of the original Lycoming O-320. The 172 POH wants carb heat on approach. This makes no sense to me. If I have to do a go around it is just one more workload item/one more thing to forget and, from my Piper experience, it does not appear to be necessary. My guess, without benefit of any actual facts, is that this POH requirement comes from Cessna's Continental roots and has no engineering justification. So it seems wise to ignore it. Your Piper experience differs from mine. Facing a long slow ILS through wet clouds in a Piper, I'd set full carb heat, a minute or two before reducing power. Ever taxi off the runway and have your engine quit? |
#3
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The key is the "as required". That puts the monkey on your back.
Lycomings do incur carb ice, though perhaps less often. |
#4
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Mitty wrote:
Gents, Though this is not strictly an IFR question, I am pretty sure that you have opinions that I would like to get. Subject is Lycoming O-360 engines. I have flown behind a number of them in Pipers and the POH instruction on carb heat is always "as required." Specifically there is no requirement for carb heat on the landing checklist. This makes sense to me as the intake charge is routed through the oil pan cum intake manifold and, with the throttle nearly closed hence low flow velocity, should get adequately warmed up. At least that is my rationale for why the POH does not call for heat. I am about to get checked out in a Civil Air Patrol 172 that has an STC'd O-360 installed in place of the original Lycoming O-320. The 172 POH wants carb heat on approach. This makes no sense to me. If I have to do a go around it is just one more workload item/one more thing to forget and, from my Piper experience, it does not appear to be necessary. My guess, without benefit of any actual facts, is that this POH requirement comes from Cessna's Continental roots and has no engineering justification. So it seems wise to ignore it. Comments? (Please, let's not go to the FARS with this question. That is not my interest.) Bottom line, Pipers need carb heat a lot less than Cessnas because of a different air induction system design. Cessna 172's need carb heat pretty much all the time below a certain RPM (it was 1800 in the last one I flew) because they don't route their induction air as close to the manifold so it doesn't get heated as well. On the runup with a Piper when you check carb heat you get a lot smaller RPM drop than a Cessna does. This is because the Piper's air is already pretty warm. |
#5
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In article 1126723296.783817@sj-nntpcache-3, Dave Butler wrote:
Mitty wrote: I am about to get checked out in a Civil Air Patrol 172 that has an STC'd O-360 installed in place of the original Lycoming O-320. The 172 POH wants carb heat on approach. This makes no sense to me. If I have to do a go around it is just one more workload item/one more thing to forget and, from my Piper experience, it does not appear to be necessary. My guess, without benefit of any actual facts, is that this POH requirement comes from Cessna's Continental roots and has no engineering justification. So it seems wise to ignore it. Your Piper experience differs from mine. Facing a long slow ILS through wet clouds in a Piper, I'd set full carb heat, a minute or two before reducing power. Ever taxi off the runway and have your engine quit? I have had it quit on short final (in a PA-28-181). Almost exactly the situation you described -- ILS on a cool day with very small temp/dp spread, low vis, low scattered layer. Over the airport boundary, I pulled the throttle back to idle to land and things got quiet. I was on the ground almost before I had a chance to realize what went wrong. Hung out for a while on the runway while the ice melted then started up and taxied off. Had a mechanic look at it, he found no problems, so we assumed carb ice. From that day on, I used carb heat in Pipers on instrument approaches. I've also gotten carb ice in an Archer at cruise power in clouds. |
#6
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![]() On 9/14/2005 2:15 PM, xyzzy wrote the following: snip Bottom line, Pipers need carb heat a lot less than Cessnas because of a different air induction system design. Cessna 172's need carb heat pretty much all the time below a certain RPM (it was 1800 in the last one I flew) because they don't route their induction air as close to the manifold so it doesn't get heated as well. On the runup with a Piper when you check carb heat you get a lot smaller RPM drop than a Cessna does. This is because the Piper's air is already pretty warm. I think you've just described the difference between Continental and Lycoming engines, no? This is a Cessna with a Lycoming, where a single casting functions both as the intake manifold and the oil sump. |
#7
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Mitty wrote:
On 9/14/2005 2:15 PM, xyzzy wrote the following: snip Bottom line, Pipers need carb heat a lot less than Cessnas because of a different air induction system design. Cessna 172's need carb heat pretty much all the time below a certain RPM (it was 1800 in the last one I flew) because they don't route their induction air as close to the manifold so it doesn't get heated as well. On the runup with a Piper when you check carb heat you get a lot smaller RPM drop than a Cessna does. This is because the Piper's air is already pretty warm. I think you've just described the difference between Continental and Lycoming engines, no? This is a Cessna with a Lycoming, where a single casting functions both as the intake manifold and the oil sump. No I haven't. The Cessna I flew (a 1975 M) had a Lyc, and so does the Piper Warrior I fly now. Cessnas need more carb heat for the same engine. Not all of the induction system is designed by the engine manufacturer. -- "You can support the troops but not the president" --Representative Tom Delay (R-TX), during the Kosovo war. |
#8
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In article , Mitty
wrote: [snip] If I have to do a go around it is just one more workload item/one more thing to forget and, from my Piper experience, I first learned in a 172 in 1987, and haven't flown a cessna since around 1990 (just cherokees). I *still* remember the pre-landing checklist, the emergency checklist, and the go-around checklist for the 172. Putting in the carb heat is really quite simple - but maybe I have an advantage because I first learned on the 172. -- Bob Noel no one likes an educated mule |
#9
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I once read a report about carb heat use published by the NTSB (which, of
course, I can't lay hands on now). In it, they pointed out the hazard of having disparate methods of carb heat use depending on engine and airframe, and suggested that full carb heat be applied any time the power was reduced below cruise power...no matter who made the engine or airframe. They felt that this standardization would have a positive effect on accident rates. With regard to your transition into a Cessna model that I have not seen, is the carb heat control still to the left of the throttle? Can it not be pushed in with your thumb while the throttle is being pushed in by the base of your palm? Bob Gardner "Mitty" wrote in message ... Gents, Though this is not strictly an IFR question, I am pretty sure that you have opinions that I would like to get. Subject is Lycoming O-360 engines. I have flown behind a number of them in Pipers and the POH instruction on carb heat is always "as required." Specifically there is no requirement for carb heat on the landing checklist. This makes sense to me as the intake charge is routed through the oil pan cum intake manifold and, with the throttle nearly closed hence low flow velocity, should get adequately warmed up. At least that is my rationale for why the POH does not call for heat. I am about to get checked out in a Civil Air Patrol 172 that has an STC'd O-360 installed in place of the original Lycoming O-320. The 172 POH wants carb heat on approach. This makes no sense to me. If I have to do a go around it is just one more workload item/one more thing to forget and, from my Piper experience, it does not appear to be necessary. My guess, without benefit of any actual facts, is that this POH requirement comes from Cessna's Continental roots and has no engineering justification. So it seems wise to ignore it. Comments? (Please, let's not go to the FARS with this question. That is not my interest.) |
#10
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Subject is Lycoming O-360 engines. I have flown behind a number of them in
Pipers and the POH instruction on carb heat is always "as required." Carb ice happens when it happens. You need carb heat when you need it. If the OAT is 30F and the dewpoint -5F, no airplane needs carb heat - there's simply not enough moisture in the air to build any carb ice. When flying an approach with an OAT of 65F and the dew point the same, through thick, fluffy cloud every carbureted airplane needs carb heat - as soon as you throttle back for the descent, you will be building up carb ice even if you're running a Lycoming-powered Piper. Most situations fall somewhere between the extremes and call for a pilot to monitor the engine and decide when carb heat should be used. Some airplanes call for carb heat at specific times because most pilots are not terribly good at determining when they need carb heat. Pilots manage to ignore all the warning signs of carb ice right to the point where the engine quits with disturbing regularity. The induction system on Cessnas is not really the same as it is on Pipers. The installation makes a big difference. Before Piper started making Lycoming O-320 powered Cherokees, Piper made Lycoming O-320 powered TriPacers. I used to own one, and it iced every chance it got. The current owner installed an STC'd modifications to the oil cooler, and it doesn't ice up the way it used to. So what I'm trying to tell you is this - there's more to carb icing potential than the engine, or even the airframe it's on. The particular modifications installed can even make a significant difference. I would suggest that the procedural use of carb heat on approach to landing (VFR ir IFR) is wise in any case, and ignoring the POH requirement for it would be unwise at best unless you're confident you can reliably detect the formation of carb ice in the descent based on engine sound and instrument indications. My experience is that most pilots can't. If you forget to turn off the carb heat on go-around, performance will be somewhat anemic - but it takes only a second to realize it is anemic and turn the carb heat off. But if you develop carb ice on the descent to landing, the go-around can get REALLY exciting. Michael |
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