kgwilson Posted Thursday at 11:59 PM Posted Thursday at 11:59 PM Just checked the PE guide OT has posted. It was legal when the instructor did it but not when I did it. 1
facthunter Posted Friday at 12:10 AM Posted Friday at 12:10 AM (edited) Page 30 Read it, all . Thanks OT. It's as I recalled .No change from 45 years ago. I wish I'd noticed the Page 30 . I sifted through the index. Everything's there. Take the guess workout of being close. Nev Edited Friday at 12:16 AM by facthunter more content. 1
turboplanner Posted Friday at 12:16 AM Posted Friday at 12:16 AM (edited) If I had flown some of the actions described above, I would have been killed: 1. When under instruction doing a forced landing where, as we got close each option I had was blocked by something with the Instructor saying "Well we crashed and burned on that one. (This was the 4th of 6 I did on that lesson.) without the engine we would have gone in. 2. In all my flying life I'd never had wind shear, just neat smooth descents on final. On this day I got a wind shear on final and before I reacted the Instructor gave it WOT and we ballooned up. Without the engine we would have hit the ground hard. 3. About six months later, now with an extra skill under my belt I got another wind shear on final and slammed on WOT. My highly regarded CFI yelled "ffffull throttle" just as the throttle hit the stops. Some people make direct comparisons with gliders but RA aircraft don't have glider airbrakes and pulling off a landing you are overshooting at full adrenaline for an engine out is not so easy in a powered airctraft, and most RA aircraft are very high drag, so not quite so safe to stretch out a glide, if your practice goes wrong. I've known some people do engine off glides regular and also do aerobatics and beat ups; about half of them are dead. So I would not reommend picking on some overseas story which might or might not be totally true and trying it out for yourself when (a) it's illegal and (b) you can't guarantee the outcome if you are hit by a curve like wind shear. Edited Friday at 12:27 AM by turboplanner 3 1
facthunter Posted Friday at 12:43 AM Posted Friday at 12:43 AM Good stuff. By the way, people, You Can't stretch a glide and you risk losing control if you attempt it. There's a best speed and that's it aerodynamically.. Nev 1 1
JG3 Posted Friday at 12:53 AM Author Posted Friday at 12:53 AM I've done engine off landings scores of times over 20 years. always hit the target. Particularly easy in a Savannah aircraft due to it's excellent glide stability, ability for stable slips for a steep descent, and gentle stall characteristics for a controlled touch-down. Maintain glide at 60 kts rather than best glide at 50, for spare dynamic energy if needed. Come in a bit high and slip down to an exact touch-down point. Easy. Wouldn't attempt it in just any aircraft. I've flown a couple of thousand hours on X-country flights, and always wanted to be able to do a precise spot landing anywhere if emergency. Would have been frightening if I had done all that with no practice and experience. I mostly follow the written rules, but if those rules don't match my need for safety than I'll do it my way. 4 1
facthunter Posted Friday at 01:09 AM Posted Friday at 01:09 AM In Flying training plenty of people got killed trying to train to not be killed. The laws are made considering all aspects. IF they are ridiculous work to have them changed. . I happen to agree with this one. It's risky advocating for regulation non observance publicly. Youb may encourage others. Learn the difference for your plane. safely and apply it if the need arises. When you have an engine failure away from the circuit you don't know the wind or the actual height above terrain as well as the surface you have to land on.. Nev 2
Garfly Posted Friday at 01:09 AM Posted Friday at 01:09 AM 1 hour ago, kgwilson said: I have had instructors turn the engine off when performing a BFR though I've no idea of the legality of doing so. I have done the same to check glide performance and really didn't find any difference. There may have been a little but it wasn't obvious. The important thing is to turn the Mag switches back on as soon as the prop stops just in case you need a quick start I have also done that kind of testing with a CFI (and we reached the same conclusion) and it is legal under RAAus rules. 1
Thruster88 Posted Friday at 01:15 AM Posted Friday at 01:15 AM I will continue to do engine off in the thruster, in my opinion it is almost essential in this type of high drag low inertia aircraft. If the 2 stroke ever does fail suddenly I will be conditioned, we don't have 3 or 4 seconds for the startle factor. Scenario based training. 2 2
Garfly Posted Friday at 01:23 AM Posted Friday at 01:23 AM (edited) 1 hour ago, turboplanner said: So I would not reommend picking on some overseas story which might or might not be totally true and trying it out for yourself when (a) it's illegal and (b) you can't guarantee the outcome if you are hit by a curve like wind shear. The scene depicted in the Italian video (above) would be legal here. In pursuit of greater competence and safety, I would gladly seek out such training just as I would seek out, say, upset recovery training. Edited Friday at 01:25 AM by Garfly 1
facthunter Posted Friday at 01:35 AM Posted Friday at 01:35 AM 3 or 4 seconds is too long. As the motor fails the nose goes down in a draggy plane. Nev 1 1 1
turboplanner Posted Friday at 01:49 AM Posted Friday at 01:49 AM The excuses starting altready. I notice wind shear has been take out of the equations etc. And the other factors; I gave the unsuitability of forced laanding site but there are plenty of others where you need power and another attempt. Practising without power removes the safety margin. Sure, in the real thing you might not remember what to do, but THAT's what you should be practising, not some bandaid that could get you killed. 1
JG3 Posted Friday at 03:57 AM Author Posted Friday at 03:57 AM Also remember that the switches are ON and one hand is on the START key. Rotax always starts IMMEDIATELY from such a shutdown. So it's not really a committed dead engine landing. Go up with a good instructor and try it several times over a quiet airstrip, and get used to the silence, and the stick pressure required for safe glide, and control response feeling, and glide ratio, until all is familiar. Rather than wait until it does happen unexpectedly and the sudden shock of silence causes a feeling of panic and too much to figure out at once. When it is familiar it's a glorious feeling of control, with just the sound of wind whistling by. Could become addictive.... 3 2
Garfly Posted Friday at 04:06 AM Posted Friday at 04:06 AM 2 minutes ago, turboplanner said: Sorry no credibility. Sorry no substance. 1
facthunter Posted Friday at 04:23 AM Posted Friday at 04:23 AM Rotax starters are no different to others. and can have engagement problems. You certainly cannot start one by increasing speed as you CAN with some direct drive engines. Nev.
Garfly Posted Friday at 04:52 AM Posted Friday at 04:52 AM True, but whenever I've done (dual) engine-off practice glides the Rotax has burst back to life instantly. But still, nobody depends on it so that training is always done within easy reach of an ample runway. 1
facthunter Posted Friday at 05:14 AM Posted Friday at 05:14 AM They start easier because you are moving, but they still NEED the starter to operate, IF you have Variable pitch use coarse pitch to apply the best turning force initially. The effect of the prop stopped varies a lot. You should be aware of how your plane is affected and it's only ONE of the many variables you will encounter oved NEW countryside,. Nev 1
rodgerc Posted Friday at 08:54 AM Posted Friday at 08:54 AM 4 hours ago, JG3 said: Also remember that the switches are ON and one hand is on the START key. Rotax always starts IMMEDIATELY from such a shutdown. So it's not really a committed dead engine landing. Go up with a good instructor and try it several times over a quiet airstrip, and get used to the silence, and the stick pressure required for safe glide, and control response feeling, and glide ratio, until all is familiar. Rather than wait until it does happen unexpectedly and the sudden shock of silence causes a feeling of panic and too much to figure out at once. When it is familiar it's a glorious feeling of control, with just the sound of wind whistling by. Could become addictive.... Keep doing what you do Gilpi…You’re a recreational aviation legend around the airfield with joie de vivre that most can only aspire to. 4 1
RFguy Posted Friday at 09:41 AM Posted Friday at 09:41 AM I think I'd like to have at least 500 feet to lose to restart the Lycoming in my PA28.... and probably wouldnt attempt it below maybe 1000 feet if there was a place to land in sight.... better to concentrate on the landing, unless you have someone competent in the other seat to fly it while you are dealing with the primer etc, troubleshooting..... 1 1
turboplanner Posted Friday at 08:07 PM Posted Friday at 08:07 PM 10 hours ago, RFguy said: I think I'd like to have at least 500 feet to lose to restart the Lycoming in my PA28.... and probably wouldnt attempt it below maybe 1000 feet if there was a place to land in sight.... better to concentrate on the landing, unless you have someone competent in the other seat to fly it while you are dealing with the primer etc, troubleshooting..... GA training for a PA28 140 or Warrior where the engine fails on take off is usually FUEL (tap change) > MIXTURE RICH > SWITCHES L>R > aim between two houses or factories. It's forced landings where, after the above preliminary it's TRIM for 75 kts followed by the forced landing checklist. It's the trim action which gets the aircraft on an optimum descent path with the engine off. 1 1
NT5224 Posted 20 hours ago Posted 20 hours ago On 2/1/2025 at 5:48 PM, Garfly said: While looking for that anti-heat-soak cowl-flap story for re-posting in Skippy's Linear Actuator thread I was taken back to the main topic of JG3's original thread: Prop Stopped. I reckon it's probably worth a bump; some interesting discussion around whether we should, from time to time, practise real dead-stick landings. And then, out of the blue, I came upon this example. (I see the instructor returned the switches to ON ready for a restart if needed) : Hi All Great, very instructive video. I hate to criticise, the emergency was well handled, but I thought the pilot landed very long at high speed. In a real off strip situation you probably want to glide at best rate to make of your touch down point, but then slow things up when you’re sure you’re in. I’ve had two engine out emergencies in real life flying, but am still learning. Helpful to see this exercise. Alan 2 1
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