Just finished reading an accident report from over a decade ago where the highly experienced pilot took of from a 1900' strip with fairly tall tress to climb over. The performance charts said he could do it, but he didn't make it over the trees and crashed. It was discovered that he had low compression on one engine(20/80). The pilot had flown into this airstrip the same day. It is possible that the aircraft had this compression issue prior to departing to the short airstrip.
This got me thinking about what a person might do to prevent this accident. Would it make sense to pull the prop through(with all reasonable safety precautions taken) several times before the flight into the short strip to see if he could notice low compression on one cylinder. I could see this happening on a rental aircraft where one is not particularly familiar with it.
Thanks
This got me thinking about what a person might do to prevent this accident. Would it make sense to pull the prop through(with all reasonable safety precautions taken) several times before the flight into the short strip to see if he could notice low compression on one cylinder. I could see this happening on a rental aircraft where one is not particularly familiar with it.
Thanks