Looks like a freshly painted Duke...
It's not a Duke, Dukes have a single door not the split door. Thinking a Cessna 402.
in the words of the inimitable Foghorn Leghorn.
"It's a joke, son."
http://www.youtube.com/watch?v=KTwnwbG9YLE
You're right, it is a camera plane. I know someone who owns a 401 and a 402 set up like that but neither one of them are blue.It's a camera plane. You can see the camera at 1:10 into the video. It it is like the one's I'm used to seeing better hope the camera wasn't hurt. It's worth more than the plane.
I might have shut it down and glided in, just to save the engine tear downs.
I might have shut it down and glided in, just to save the engine tear downs.
Go to full power as soon as you slow to 50 kts! That way you get NEW engines, not just your old tired engines after an inspection! Faster turn around, too.
On most twins I think you're more likely to get a check and told to go find a new one.
If you purchase the correct amount of insurance, that check might not be so bad!
(this is all in jest, any rulemongerers in the pattern.)
Gliding because you have no other choice is one thing. Intentionally shutting down the engines is another.Sorry, just my point of view from my own little corner of the world. I glide my own airplane in routinely just in case I have to do it for real. I guess you have the second engine so you never have to glide the twin, at least until you do.
Sorry, just my point of view from my own little corner of the world. I glide my own airplane in routinely just in case I have to do it for real. I guess you have the second engine so you never have to glide the twin, at least until you do.
Additionally, if you've got the right set of conditions (hot day, heavy, etc.) in the right twin (underpowered), you may be a powered glider in the event of an engine failure and unable to maintain altitude. You'll still only have one shot at landing.
I might have shut it down and glided in, just to save the engine tear downs.
Mill quits on my bird and that's my situation in a nutshell. That's why I practice.
Doesn't save ya nuttin' when you have 3-blade props like this one. At least one blade is gonna hit - And then it's teardown time.
Plus, it's an exceedingly bad idea. I heard a story about a twin (310 IIRC) that had a gear problem, the pilot shut 'em down and tried to glide in - Well, that's a maneuver you just don't practice in a twin, and it showed. He crashed a couple thousand feet shy of the runway. What would have been a minor damage incident turned into an airplane-destroyed accident...
Must be a very private joke.in the words of the inimitable Foghorn Leghorn.
"It's a joke, son."
http://www.youtube.com/watch?v=KTwnwbG9YLE
Must be a very private joke.
Yes, but why would you intentionally put yourself in the situation to use those capabilities unless it was absolutely necessary? "A good pilot uses his (or her) superior judgement to avoid having to use his superior skills."
Because if I do it in a safe manner (runway environment with frequent increases of power to keep the mill turning) it is very good practice at energy management and emergency procedures. If I do it frequently it becomes second nature if I have to do it for real in an emergency. Why would anyone practice any kind of emergency procedure? Besides, its fun, and part of the PTS.
I have more than once cut the power at altitude and glided to a safe landing at a nearby airport. Personally, I think every pilot should have to do that at least once, to see the issues involved. Power losses don't always occur in the runway environment. One does have to take simple common sense steps to make certain a simulated emergency doesn't turn into a real one.
Yeah, but we are talking about TWINS here, not singles. And you wouldn't practice engine outs in you single by intentionally completely shutting down the engine via mixture or mags.
Maybe this one?Y'know, I'm not certain, but I think that's the belly landing incident that occurred just recently at SGF.
Once you're over the threshold you probably don't have enough time to shut down the engine and mess with bumping the props. You'd need to be carrying a lot of airspeed to even mess with that because you're going to be touching down pretty quickly without thrust. Just isn't worth it. Let the insurance company replace your run out engines.You know, if I've got a 8,000 foot runway, I might consider shutting down the engines on a twin once I'm over the threshold. But not before, and not on anything much shorter.
What you guys are saying makes sense. There seems to be a bit of a cultural difference between those who fly singles, where demonstrating an engine out landing is part of the PTS, and those who fly twins, where you have the second engine to avoid having to do a dead stick landing.
Not exactly -- there's a differences between an engine at idle and truly "out."
Nitpicking. I come as close to a power-out landing as I can safely, to practice for the potential. It does make sense that a twin-driver wouldn't do this routinely, probably more likely to harm the aircraft than the event itself. I wouldn't turn off an engine in flight for anything. Yeah, the sink rate will be a tad lower in actual. But I have little doubt that my occasional drills will help me in the eventuality.