And there is no excuse when any GPS unit provides that information.When will people learn that fuel management is more a matter of time not distance? You have X hours in your tank, not Y miles.
Don’t know the area, was there no intermediate airport when fuel got below what it was planned to be?
Or take your head out of your *ss...Some parts of the country you have to double your safety margin. Or triple.
Actually a simple time piece provides that information. The magenta line contraption is irrelevant.And there is no excuse when any GPS unit provides that information.
GPS sure makes it easier when it displays ground speed and ETE.Actually a simple time piece provides that information. The magenta line contraption is irrelevant.
Halfway point?It’s not like he came up 50nm short. He barely Made it past the halfway point I thought.
So here's a question: Given the low temps we've been having, would the lower density altitude, with it's increased drag and need for richer mixture to compensate for the denser air compute to a higher fuel burn per hour? Maybe failure to consider DA? I could probably do the math, but thought I would ask here.
So here's a question: Given the low temps we've been having, would the lower density altitude, with it's increased drag and need for richer mixture to compensate for the denser air compute to a higher fuel burn per hour? Maybe failure to consider DA? I could probably do the math, but thought I would ask here.
If I understand the article correctly, he was over Rawlins direct Rock Springs and landed short of Rock Springs. Interstate 80 runs in a nearly straight line between Rawlins and Rock Springs. Maybe he didn't see Bertorelli's video on Avweb about freeway landings?One of the lost lessons in aviation is the precautionary landing. There may have been better options along the route an airport with better SAR options.
So are we talking about a 542 nm flight at 120 kt at 10+ GPH with a 48 gal fuel capacity? Into likely prevailing winds? What could possibly go wrong? It is depressing that we see this kind of fuel planning too often. Self-induced fuel exhaustion is 100% preventable.
Sadly true, what, 3 knots over five hours?The wheel pants that were removed would have likely provided "just" enough drag reduction to make the final 3 miles to Rock Springs.