whitepines
Pre-Flight
- Joined
- Aug 21, 2020
- Messages
- 55
- Display Name
Display name:
whitepines
Just had my first real, live in-flight emergency today....and it wasn't the classic engine failure that gets so much emphasis. Thought I'd post here to see if there's anything I should have done better, but at least the airplane is on the ground in one piece and waiting for the mechanic to look at it.
Airplane is a Piper Arrow III, retractable gear. Preflight was normal, trim wheel was operable and placed into neutral per the checklist. Runup indicated no problems. First indication I had of a possible problem was that the nose seemed a bit light compared to normal, but as this was very subtle and right before the normal rotation speed I figured it was just a bit of wind or similar.
Immediately after rotation I could tell something was wrong, I had to push the nose over hard and hold just to keep a semi-normal attitude and keep the airspeed from decaying below 60KIAS. I instinctively reached for the trim wheel and found it frozen in place, wouldn't budge. The electric trim motor was not running holding it there, it was just jammed.
At that point my main focus was on preventing a departure stall, so I kept forcing the nose down and retracted the gear; at this point I was able to keep the plane in a normal climb with a lot of forward pressure. At 400' AGL I did a quick controllability check to make sure it was even possible to put the plane into a descent, and since it was (with a lot of force!) I chose not to try to force the trim since I didn't quite know what was wrong with the tail feathers and didn't want to make an already borderline control situation worse.
Called pan-pan and flew a tight pattern back in, putting the gear back down early and deploying flaps to try to relieve some of the control pressure. Landing was two handed (basically needed to keep the yoke forward until the flare) but otherwise uneventful.
I was informed on the ground that this is a fairly rare occurrence in Piper aircraft. I did report it to the NTSB as a flight control malfunction since it seems to fit the definition, and will see if they need any follow-up or are just tracking malfunction type etc.
0.3 on the Hobbs, and a lot more excitement than I anticipated, but now I know how I'll react in the "real deal"....
Airplane is a Piper Arrow III, retractable gear. Preflight was normal, trim wheel was operable and placed into neutral per the checklist. Runup indicated no problems. First indication I had of a possible problem was that the nose seemed a bit light compared to normal, but as this was very subtle and right before the normal rotation speed I figured it was just a bit of wind or similar.
Immediately after rotation I could tell something was wrong, I had to push the nose over hard and hold just to keep a semi-normal attitude and keep the airspeed from decaying below 60KIAS. I instinctively reached for the trim wheel and found it frozen in place, wouldn't budge. The electric trim motor was not running holding it there, it was just jammed.
At that point my main focus was on preventing a departure stall, so I kept forcing the nose down and retracted the gear; at this point I was able to keep the plane in a normal climb with a lot of forward pressure. At 400' AGL I did a quick controllability check to make sure it was even possible to put the plane into a descent, and since it was (with a lot of force!) I chose not to try to force the trim since I didn't quite know what was wrong with the tail feathers and didn't want to make an already borderline control situation worse.
Called pan-pan and flew a tight pattern back in, putting the gear back down early and deploying flaps to try to relieve some of the control pressure. Landing was two handed (basically needed to keep the yoke forward until the flare) but otherwise uneventful.
I was informed on the ground that this is a fairly rare occurrence in Piper aircraft. I did report it to the NTSB as a flight control malfunction since it seems to fit the definition, and will see if they need any follow-up or are just tracking malfunction type etc.
0.3 on the Hobbs, and a lot more excitement than I anticipated, but now I know how I'll react in the "real deal"....