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The Little Arrow That Could
I have this placard that sits right above my left knee on the panel when I'm in the pilot seat of the arrow:
I've always interpreted this to mean: "if you need an alternate static source, pull the little lever aft and it'll open"
I check to make sure my static port is clear each preflight and I don't fly in icing conditions, thus I've never had a clogged external static port/reason to use an alternate static source in a flight. That means all of the flight time since buying the airplane 4y ago I've left the switch in the forward position (it's a little valve with a lever on the side that can be rotated 90 degrees so that it points backwards towards the pilot [pulled aft] or is sideways pointing towards the LH wing [pushed forward]).
Forward position:
Aft position:
It wasn't until today that I was using it on a XC flight, mainly b/c it was a long, uneventful trek and I toggled it wanting to see the expected behavior for funsies.
But everything was reversed. When pulled AFT vents/heat/defroster don't do anything, but when forward they make an impact. A short lived impact to be sure, but an impact nonetheless.
It's the kind of impact I wouldn't normally see in air (VFR flying) unless I turned the vents from OFF to maximum blast at once and watched my VSI in the interim, which I did on this flight. On the ground I verified it as well by shutting the door quickly and watching the VSI.
So that was an interesting development. I'll admit, I never thought to test and make sure it wasn't reversed. Kind of like I wouldn't normally think my Alternate Air is wired in reverse for OPEN/CLOSE but maybe I should check that too! lol.
During 4 annuals, G5 AI install, a static line repair and 2 IFR equipment signoffs, no one's ever mentioned it. I've flown hundreds of flights on FF verifying my altitude without issue to ATC and everything, so thankfully any deviation wasn't significant.
I'm curious... Anyone else here ever tested theirs and found this? I found one other case online here. So maybe it's not completely without precedent, but embarrassing nonetheless. I figure I either need a new placard or need the plumbing to be corrected. A third option is possible: I'm completely obtuse and the placard is correct and my entire understanding of what "pull aft to open" means is wrong lol.
I've always interpreted this to mean: "if you need an alternate static source, pull the little lever aft and it'll open"
I check to make sure my static port is clear each preflight and I don't fly in icing conditions, thus I've never had a clogged external static port/reason to use an alternate static source in a flight. That means all of the flight time since buying the airplane 4y ago I've left the switch in the forward position (it's a little valve with a lever on the side that can be rotated 90 degrees so that it points backwards towards the pilot [pulled aft] or is sideways pointing towards the LH wing [pushed forward]).
Forward position:
Aft position:
It wasn't until today that I was using it on a XC flight, mainly b/c it was a long, uneventful trek and I toggled it wanting to see the expected behavior for funsies.
But everything was reversed. When pulled AFT vents/heat/defroster don't do anything, but when forward they make an impact. A short lived impact to be sure, but an impact nonetheless.
It's the kind of impact I wouldn't normally see in air (VFR flying) unless I turned the vents from OFF to maximum blast at once and watched my VSI in the interim, which I did on this flight. On the ground I verified it as well by shutting the door quickly and watching the VSI.
So that was an interesting development. I'll admit, I never thought to test and make sure it wasn't reversed. Kind of like I wouldn't normally think my Alternate Air is wired in reverse for OPEN/CLOSE but maybe I should check that too! lol.
During 4 annuals, G5 AI install, a static line repair and 2 IFR equipment signoffs, no one's ever mentioned it. I've flown hundreds of flights on FF verifying my altitude without issue to ATC and everything, so thankfully any deviation wasn't significant.
I'm curious... Anyone else here ever tested theirs and found this? I found one other case online here. So maybe it's not completely without precedent, but embarrassing nonetheless. I figure I either need a new placard or need the plumbing to be corrected. A third option is possible: I'm completely obtuse and the placard is correct and my entire understanding of what "pull aft to open" means is wrong lol.