Intentionally: hard against FAA required reserves.How close have you pushed your fuel reserves
......Some things don't need a second lesson.
Even if you were directly over CMH and headed home?
Intentionally: hard against FAA required reserves.
Unintentionally: 15 minutes of flight at full power ROP setting. 65% LOP resolved the issue.
How close have you pushed your fuel reserves
This is a misnomer, you are not required by the FAA to have any reserve on landing. You are required the reserves on takeoff in case you need more fuel for some reason.
The worst I ever got I landed with about 15minutes of fuel left, but I had multiple options for landing prior to my destination and had a Hoskins Fuel Flow/Totalizer to monitor the situation.
Close enough that if I hadn't diverted to the airport I did, I would have diverted to a field instead a few minutes later. It is not my most proud moment, especially considering some of the other boners I committed on that flight.
You'll appreciate this:
When working for the cropduster, I had a pilot land for his next load. I went out to hook up the water line before fueling (as normal) and he waved me down and said "Bring the fuel and hurry!" He was low enough that he was worried about running out while I loaded him.
It really depends on the flight. I go down to 30 minutes while flying skydivers (need that useful load).
On cross countries - it depends on the airplane and the weather and lots of other factors but I've never dipped below a hour.
If you run yourself out of gas, you screwed up. They're not going to appreciate you running out of gas at 1500AGL or even higher and telling them to boot the students or tandem loads out the door RIGHT NOW. Someone could very easily get very hurt.Skydivers is a whole nother matter, as long as I have fuel to get them to altitude, I'm good. I don't like carrying any more fuel with jumpers than I absolutely have to, and I can glide back to the runway from any point I'd run out of fuel. Skydiver crashes are typically ugly, I want to keep the fuel load to a minimum to try and prevent roasting a bunch of people who are most likely injured. The highest risk in a skydive operation is the take off. Once you're above pattern altitude, you can shed ballast quickly and glide to the runway.
If you run yourself out of gas, you screwed up. They're not going to appreciate you running out of gas at 1500AGL or even higher and telling them to boot the students or tandem loads out the door RIGHT NOW. Someone could very easily get very hurt.
I just keep an eye on the upcoming loads and adjust the fuel as per that. Never more than 30 gallons, never less than 8. Adding fuel for every load would delay the operation and cost them money. Need to run that elevator up and down as efficiently and quickly as possible.
I do agree that extra fuel is a liability but running out is too. It's an interesting balance. It'd be nice to have a fuel totalizer to help further balance that relationship. But that won't ever happen.I never ran it out of gas, I'm just saying that the potential for running out of gas are minimal and the consequences are low so I don't need to add a reserve buffer. On the other hand, adding a reserve buffer has negative consequences operationally and in safety. Skydiving is an instance that breaks the general rule of reserve fuel being a safety factor because in this instance the nature of the operation makes reserve fuel a liability.
Any one run their tanks completely dry before selecting the last tank?
Any one run their tanks completely dry before selecting the last tank?
Any one run their tanks completely dry before selecting the last tank?
I've done it on all the tanks in some of the plane's I've owned and/or flew regularly to determine what the actual fuel capacity was. I haven't tried this in the Porterfield since there's only one tank and running that dry could be problematic. Also in the Baron it's OK to run the aux tanks dry but since you're supposed to take off and land on the mains I'm reluctant to empty them completely.Any one run their tanks completely dry before selecting the last tank?
Any one run their tanks completely dry before selecting the last tank?
I had a sobering experience flying to SnF once. I landed my old Tomahawk in Ocala, Fl to refuel. Based on estimated fuel burn and time aloft, I expected to have burned maybe 24-25 gallons, leaving slightly less than a one hour reserve. IIRC, refueling the airplane took almost 30 gallons. It supposedly held 32.
In the RV, the airplane burns 8 GPH at the power settings I use for X/C. That's been proven time and time again. So I fly a max of 4 hour legs, using 32 of the 38 available gallons and leaving a 45 minute reserve.
If we are fessing up.
I left 4 corners regional with the C-170-B with 42 gallons on board, (37 usable) landed at Logan Ut. and loaded 38 gallons.
never has happened again.Kinda sobering, ain't it?
Any one run their tanks completely dry before selecting the last tank?
It really depends on the flight. I go down to 30 minutes while flying skydivers (need that useful load).
On cross countries - it depends on the airplane and the weather and lots of other factors but I've never dipped below a hour.