drummer4468
Pre-takeoff checklist
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- Jul 5, 2020
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drummer4468
Had a mildly funny encounter this evening which came with some teachable moments for other learning pilots:
Was doing my first dual XC for commercial and having a grand old time. Beat up the pattern at a distant gravel strip for a while and headed back to base. Fuel selector management could have been better but we had plenty of gas in total. The timing between swapping tanks got kinda wonky with the pattern work, so toward the end I elected to stay on the right tank longer than usual to ensure that we remained over the yellow arc on the left when it was time to land, in case of a go-around.
**Note- the yellow arc I refer to is the min fuel level approved for take-off/climb to prevent fuel unporting and the pump sucking in air during acceleration, which may take some time to reach the engine, killing it at a critical moment like 100ft above the end of the runway
As the sun was setting maybe 30mins out from home, the CFI reminded me to keep an eye on the engine gauges since he couldn't see them behind the yoke-mounted iPad. I already was, of course, so I didn't think much of it. The right tank was reading pretty low and I was soon going to switch over anyway during the pre-landing checklist. However, I neglected to relay this internal dialogue to Mr. CFI.
Welp, sure enough, about 10 mins later the big spinny part suddenly went quiet. I was mildly surprised at the sudden-ness of my first actual unplanned power loss, but since I was privy to the conversation in my head, I was already expecting the possibility of the tank running dry(just not that soon, it was still decently above the red line on the gauge). At any rate, I wasn't all too alarmed and simply reached down, only to find the CFI's hand already flying across the cockpit, changing tanks, enriching, turning the boost pump on, etc. Once the giant fan roared back to life and his heart rate came down a bit, I chuckled, apologized and explained to him my reasoning for staying on the one tank so long. He lightly chided me in debrief but understood my rationale.
LEARNING POINTS:
-Never rely completely on your 40-50-year-old fuel gauges. They lie more often than not. This is why we physically/visually check the fuel levels on the ground, and keep track of flight time and fuel burn.
-Of course, I do not advocate intentionally running tanks dry. Like I said, the gauge still read over empty and I had planned to switch shortly, but was spring-loaded to swap if needed. As everyone should be.
-Make it habit to voice all your thoughts/flows/checklists. Whether you're alone, with a CFI, or even with non-pilot passengers. Something I'm constantly working on improving. Never hurts to bounce your thoughts around so everyone's on the same page and may help catch errors. Plus it usually makes you sound super cool to non-pilots.
Was doing my first dual XC for commercial and having a grand old time. Beat up the pattern at a distant gravel strip for a while and headed back to base. Fuel selector management could have been better but we had plenty of gas in total. The timing between swapping tanks got kinda wonky with the pattern work, so toward the end I elected to stay on the right tank longer than usual to ensure that we remained over the yellow arc on the left when it was time to land, in case of a go-around.
**Note- the yellow arc I refer to is the min fuel level approved for take-off/climb to prevent fuel unporting and the pump sucking in air during acceleration, which may take some time to reach the engine, killing it at a critical moment like 100ft above the end of the runway
As the sun was setting maybe 30mins out from home, the CFI reminded me to keep an eye on the engine gauges since he couldn't see them behind the yoke-mounted iPad. I already was, of course, so I didn't think much of it. The right tank was reading pretty low and I was soon going to switch over anyway during the pre-landing checklist. However, I neglected to relay this internal dialogue to Mr. CFI.
Welp, sure enough, about 10 mins later the big spinny part suddenly went quiet. I was mildly surprised at the sudden-ness of my first actual unplanned power loss, but since I was privy to the conversation in my head, I was already expecting the possibility of the tank running dry(just not that soon, it was still decently above the red line on the gauge). At any rate, I wasn't all too alarmed and simply reached down, only to find the CFI's hand already flying across the cockpit, changing tanks, enriching, turning the boost pump on, etc. Once the giant fan roared back to life and his heart rate came down a bit, I chuckled, apologized and explained to him my reasoning for staying on the one tank so long. He lightly chided me in debrief but understood my rationale.
LEARNING POINTS:
-Never rely completely on your 40-50-year-old fuel gauges. They lie more often than not. This is why we physically/visually check the fuel levels on the ground, and keep track of flight time and fuel burn.
-Of course, I do not advocate intentionally running tanks dry. Like I said, the gauge still read over empty and I had planned to switch shortly, but was spring-loaded to swap if needed. As everyone should be.
-Make it habit to voice all your thoughts/flows/checklists. Whether you're alone, with a CFI, or even with non-pilot passengers. Something I'm constantly working on improving. Never hurts to bounce your thoughts around so everyone's on the same page and may help catch errors. Plus it usually makes you sound super cool to non-pilots.