This is one of the many reasons I am willing to pay a premium for fuel/maintenance/training/insurance to own a twin as my family cross-country hauler.Just listened to the LiveATC tape and wished I hadn't. Hard IMC and an engine failure in a small airplane with passengers onboard. You can just imagine how bad those last moments had to be. Don't think I'll sleep too well tonight.
This is one of the many reasons I am willing to pay a premium for fuel/maintenance/training/insurance to own a twin as my family cross-country hauler.
and this is why twins are safer.....And why I, although I get poo poo'd often, don't fly single engine at night or over broad areas of LIFR.
Indeed.
Pending checkride this Sunday so not official yet, but I find it amazing how many pilots fly single engine piston planes at night and in minimal IFR. I think it's fine to take that risk by yourself, but I have trouble w non pilot passengers going along and taking that risk. I don't understand the thinking. Seems like every pilot I know has either had major engine problem or knows someone that did lose engine or need emergency landing. It's not as rare as we think.
fuel injected engine....so there is no carb.
fuel injected engine....so there is no carb.
Pending checkride this Sunday so not official yet, but I find it amazing how many pilots fly single engine piston planes at night and in minimal IFR. I think it's fine to take that risk by yourself, but I have trouble w non pilot passengers going along and taking that risk. I don't understand the thinking. Seems like every pilot I know has either had major engine problem or knows someone that did lose engine or need emergency landing. It's not as rare as we think.
What's your risk tolerance?
The engine doesn't know it's dark or that it's IMC. The engine failure rate is the failure rate.
I think the argument is - Engine failure on a nice clear day is more survivable than an engine failure in IMC with 300' ceilings. When the airport is 7miles behind you, looking for that field/highway is a little easier without 2000' of clouds in your way.
I know why people don't like engine failures at night or in IMC.
My point is to think about the probability of having an engine failure in the first place. For myself, I'd much rather avoid the engine failure regardless of the flying conditions. In other words, if I don't trust my airplane in IMC or at night, why the heck would I fly it during the day/VMC?
You say you understand the argument, but the paragraph following seems to indicate you don't really.
It is about risk management. You cannot eliminate all risk of an engine crapping out. No matter who made the engine, who maintains it or how you fly it. No matter what the conditions or time of day. But you can mitigate the follow on risk of, heaven forbid, you draw the short straw.
no worries.....+80% of the time it will be you and not the machine the presents the problem.<sigh>
No kidding.
At some point the engine is reliable enough that the probability of an engine failure at night in IMC is low enough that I will accept the risk.
I'd prefer to mitigate the risk of the primary cause (engine failure) rather than sweating the details of it occuring at night, etc. In other words, the time and weather conditions are irrelevant if the engine failure doesn't happen.
My guess is a fractured/departed cylinder head...causing oil starvation....then the engine seized.
no worries....I hope it wasn't my friend Sixie in his Bo.
Very sad. Tough to imagine why anyone would have went flying in the Northeast on the day in question. Especially when waiting but 12 hours would have placed the flight in much better weather.
This is the reason I am strongly considering skipping the IFR ticket and going for the commercial license first. IFR should be used to get you out of trouble and not a ticket to get you into trouble... Just because you can does not mean you should!
Very sad. Tough to imagine why anyone would have went flying in the Northeast on the day in question. Especially when waiting but 12 hours would have placed the flight in much better weather.
This is the reason I am strongly considering skipping the IFR ticket and going for the commercial license first. IFR should be used to get you out of trouble and not a ticket to get you into trouble... Just because you can does not mean you should!
I have to wonder if the same happened to me, what I would have done differently . . . He also emphasized that it's always a good idea to carry VFR sectionals with you for any IMC/IFR flight.
As far as choosing a lake/ocean, you're almost damning yourself and pax do a watery grave in that instance.
You're telling me that if you ditch in the ocean off of the Cali coast without life vests/life raft/cold water gear at night, you expect to be picked up by a boat/CG soon enough not to die of hypothermia? That is assuming you and your pax are able to exit the aircraft once flipped upside down and filling with water?
Sorry, I'm not arguing the survivability of ditching, I'm saying doing so at night in other than warm waters when you weren't remotely prepared for a water landing is probably a poor choice.
Bah! Admittedly, one of those things would come in handy with an engine lost in hard IMC. But how often does such a scenario occur? Sorry, I'm not taking on $1000/year in expense and loosing useful load just for the 1% of the time I might actually need the fool thing. Most of the IFR pilots here tell me they spend most of their time flying in VMC anyway.
This was posted to the Purple board; emergency declaration occurs at about 9:50 into the recording:
http://archive-server.liveatc.net/kbos/KBOS-App-South-Jun-28-2015-2130Z.mp3
Basically an engine out in IMC. Ugh.