John Renquist
Filing Flight Plan
- Joined
- May 17, 2020
- Messages
- 4
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Display name:
John Renquist
Best glide with windmilling prop or stopped prop?
I recently was flying an S-35 Bonanza with an IO 550-B engine. At 4, 500 feet the engine came apart and the prop came to a very sudden stop. I immediately made a 180 turn headed to a dirt runway I was aware of. The best glide in this bird is flaps and gear up, prop to full pitch, and 110 knots. The rate of descent is alarming, to say the least. I initially felt I had the runway made but it became clear the drag the stopped prop was creating was like having three, 3-foot long speed brakes deployed. I ended up landing 1.5 miles short from the target airport on a little dirt road next to a fence. My airspeed bled off to 80 MPH almost immediately after my initial nose over and lowering the nose to 110 mph would have put me into a lake next to the road I landed on. Long story short, no one was injured and I didn't bend any metal! A stopped prop creates much more drag than a windmilling one.
I recently was flying an S-35 Bonanza with an IO 550-B engine. At 4, 500 feet the engine came apart and the prop came to a very sudden stop. I immediately made a 180 turn headed to a dirt runway I was aware of. The best glide in this bird is flaps and gear up, prop to full pitch, and 110 knots. The rate of descent is alarming, to say the least. I initially felt I had the runway made but it became clear the drag the stopped prop was creating was like having three, 3-foot long speed brakes deployed. I ended up landing 1.5 miles short from the target airport on a little dirt road next to a fence. My airspeed bled off to 80 MPH almost immediately after my initial nose over and lowering the nose to 110 mph would have put me into a lake next to the road I landed on. Long story short, no one was injured and I didn't bend any metal! A stopped prop creates much more drag than a windmilling one.