Larry Vrooman
Pre-takeoff checklist
- Joined
- Jan 30, 2020
- Messages
- 158
- Display Name
Display name:
N5168T
I used to own a motorglider and the glide ratio significantly improved with the propeller stopped. On the negative side, you had to slow to just above stall to stop it. On the other hand, it wasn't that far below the best glide airspeed, and once stopped you needed a lot of airspeed to get it spinning again.
That said, if I lose an engine in a fixed pitch GA single, I am NOT going to muck around slowing down enough to stop the propeller. In a non-motor glider that will put you way back on the drag curve where the loss due to induced drag is potentially costing you as much as more than you gain by stopping the prop.
Worse, it serves as a distraction when you should be focused on 1) identifying a place to make an emergency landing and getting set up to make the field, and then with that done and if time allows, 2) determining if a restart is possible (and having the judgement to know when it's not or when you don't have the time).
You see similar issues with accidents after landing gear failures. Gear up landings on a hard surface runway are a non event from a death and serious injury perspective, and you have to look really hard to find even one.
Unless of course the pilot did something stupid like attempting to shut down the engine(s) before landing to save the engines and props, or landing on grass in the mistaken belief it'll do less damage to the aircraft (It usually does more as the sod balls up under and in front of the wings and does far more airframe damage, as well as producing a much faster stop.) Those efforts, when they go wrong, are the accidents where you find injuries in landing gear failure events.
In short, don't get fancy. Just slow (or pitch over) to best glide speed, identify where you intend to land, and fly the airplane with no heroics.
That said, if I lose an engine in a fixed pitch GA single, I am NOT going to muck around slowing down enough to stop the propeller. In a non-motor glider that will put you way back on the drag curve where the loss due to induced drag is potentially costing you as much as more than you gain by stopping the prop.
Worse, it serves as a distraction when you should be focused on 1) identifying a place to make an emergency landing and getting set up to make the field, and then with that done and if time allows, 2) determining if a restart is possible (and having the judgement to know when it's not or when you don't have the time).
You see similar issues with accidents after landing gear failures. Gear up landings on a hard surface runway are a non event from a death and serious injury perspective, and you have to look really hard to find even one.
Unless of course the pilot did something stupid like attempting to shut down the engine(s) before landing to save the engines and props, or landing on grass in the mistaken belief it'll do less damage to the aircraft (It usually does more as the sod balls up under and in front of the wings and does far more airframe damage, as well as producing a much faster stop.) Those efforts, when they go wrong, are the accidents where you find injuries in landing gear failure events.
In short, don't get fancy. Just slow (or pitch over) to best glide speed, identify where you intend to land, and fly the airplane with no heroics.