As we do training and practice the different OEI scenarios, my instructor will guard the throttle quadrant with her hand after doing what is needed to initiate the scenario. This is to keep me from pulling a lever to far during my “working the problem” and cause an emergent situation.
And totally makes sense why she does it and should do it.
My question this morning is, in a two crew member operation (say Part 135 operators), is this same practice done?
I was taught NOT to do that -- or more accurately, not to make it obvious. Hand at the end of the knee ready to go, but not actively up behind the levers. Never anything in your hands while doing it. (Well that's CFI in general too. You'll learn to drop things real damn quick if you're dumb enough to decide a student has the approach nailed -- because that's when theyl inevitably screw it up. Hahaha...)
Guardimg can give the student too many hints. It's already bad enough they can see it unless you've pulled the old fuel cutoff trick.
And you rarely do the fuel cutoff trick. Some would say never.
You need plenty of altitude and a guaranteed OEI landing location you KNOW you can make, even if the student can't, to play that game.
The assumption must be you're not getting it back once it quits if you choose to "go there".
Suuuuuper highly experienced ME instructor only pulled that trick on me once. In a very good position to do it. He felt it was important to see it once for each MEI student.
He didn't feel it as important for a regular ME student -- but would if the opportunity arose to do it in relative safety.
Levers all the way up and one conks out. It does feel different.
NEVER do it to a new student. Always very late in the training.
Another way to somewhat simulate the visual difference is to block the student's view of the quadrant. Cardboard, a chart, paper, whatever.
They'll still be able to feel the levers but at least the first time it's mildly disorienting enough that they'll revert back to a proper power check and foot verification.
It only works well the first time though. Surprise.
Use it to add a "realistic distraction" to the fairly practiced flow.
If they were accidentally relying on their eyeballs it'll expose it.
Even if they've read this post with the deep dark MEI secrets in it. Haha.
If you're ever really high on an XC and right over a quiet airport and the weather is perfect and your instructor in a Seminole acts like he's messing with his seat belt...
... an engine is going to quit in about 30 seconds or so, and he will already be back to acting like he's looking out the right side enjoying the view.
Lol. It takes a while.
Whether I'd recommend it... Probably not. Whether he could pull it off for years and years flawlessly...
Definitely. Hahaha.
Plus you can use it to make the student read the precautionary engine shutdown checklist since nobody ever seems to bother with that one...
"Why is that item about shedding electrical load on there? ... (Blank stare...)... What does the ammeter say?" Heh.