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- May 18, 2007
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jsstevens
I managed after many tries to complete the two two hour cross counties required by 61.129 yesterday.
We flew from KSFB (Sanford) to KSSI (St. Simon's Island) leaving at 5:45 and arriving at 7:45 (we did do a little sight seeing over St. Simons). We flew up at 6,500 feet which put us above the (scattered) clouds. Super smooth, nice flight.
After dinner (I was shocked at how many places close at 7 or 8 PM-no Southern Soul BBQ for us. ) We preflighted, loaded up and got ready to leave. All was fine, and we departed 22 headed to KCRG (Craig in Jacksonville) to stay over land, then from there direct to KSFB. Engaged the auto-pilot, climbed up to 4,500 feet and just cruised along in the dark. Again, super smooth and lovely cloudless night.
About 20 miles south of KCRG, the engine monitor alarmed on battery voltage (24.2V). We checked the ammeter and sure enough it was discharging. I cycled the alternator switch, no help. So, we shed load (COM2, G-500, auto-pilot, landing light and beacon-dimmed everything down) so I was now hand flying (no big deal) on the two GI-275s. CFI called Daytona approach to let them know in case we went dark. They gave us a squawk and monitored us. After shedding the loads the battery alarm went away, but the ammeter told the tale-we were still losing current.
We discussed diverting, but we were 30-40 minutes from home plate and the closest diversion were still going to be 20 plus minutes. So we continued. We kept the RPMs up because we were getting some from the alternator, just not enough. SInce it was smooth, I just pushed over and did our descent at about 130 kias.
We were cleared for the Monroe arrival (VFR procedure for the class C at KSFB) and headed in. Voltage was down to 22.7 or so at this point. Since the flaps are a sizable electric motor, I opted for a no flap landing and the airport is well lighted so I opted for a no landing light landing. We asked for and got runway 9L (9,000+ foot runway) so I had plenty of room. The only real challenge I had on final was I had been flying at 130 knots for several minutes so 80 knots, while way to fast for final felt slow. But I conquered that and did a relatively nice no-flap landing.
Voltage at shutdown was 22.3.
It was a training flight and it was educational. And my 61.129 requirements are now met.
John
We flew from KSFB (Sanford) to KSSI (St. Simon's Island) leaving at 5:45 and arriving at 7:45 (we did do a little sight seeing over St. Simons). We flew up at 6,500 feet which put us above the (scattered) clouds. Super smooth, nice flight.
After dinner (I was shocked at how many places close at 7 or 8 PM-no Southern Soul BBQ for us. ) We preflighted, loaded up and got ready to leave. All was fine, and we departed 22 headed to KCRG (Craig in Jacksonville) to stay over land, then from there direct to KSFB. Engaged the auto-pilot, climbed up to 4,500 feet and just cruised along in the dark. Again, super smooth and lovely cloudless night.
About 20 miles south of KCRG, the engine monitor alarmed on battery voltage (24.2V). We checked the ammeter and sure enough it was discharging. I cycled the alternator switch, no help. So, we shed load (COM2, G-500, auto-pilot, landing light and beacon-dimmed everything down) so I was now hand flying (no big deal) on the two GI-275s. CFI called Daytona approach to let them know in case we went dark. They gave us a squawk and monitored us. After shedding the loads the battery alarm went away, but the ammeter told the tale-we were still losing current.
We discussed diverting, but we were 30-40 minutes from home plate and the closest diversion were still going to be 20 plus minutes. So we continued. We kept the RPMs up because we were getting some from the alternator, just not enough. SInce it was smooth, I just pushed over and did our descent at about 130 kias.
We were cleared for the Monroe arrival (VFR procedure for the class C at KSFB) and headed in. Voltage was down to 22.7 or so at this point. Since the flaps are a sizable electric motor, I opted for a no flap landing and the airport is well lighted so I opted for a no landing light landing. We asked for and got runway 9L (9,000+ foot runway) so I had plenty of room. The only real challenge I had on final was I had been flying at 130 knots for several minutes so 80 knots, while way to fast for final felt slow. But I conquered that and did a relatively nice no-flap landing.
Voltage at shutdown was 22.3.
It was a training flight and it was educational. And my 61.129 requirements are now met.
John