Ahhh…that is where the extra drain valve comes into the picture. Thanks182S has 12.
182T has 13.
Ahhh…that is where the extra drain valve comes into the picture. Thanks182S has 12.
182T has 13.
They should have given the engineer that designed this an additional requirement: you must be slapped in the face once for every required sump point checked by every pilot who uses this every time they use it.Those were necessary to get every low point that could catch water. Those airplanes don't have the separate fuel tank like the legacy airplanes; the tanks are just sealed-off sections of the wing, the old tank bays, and structural members across the bottom of the tank can catch water and hold it until the airplane bounces around some, dislodging the water and sending it toward the outlets.
This is the bottom skin of the wing in the tank area.
View attachment 122815
Numerous drains, both inboard and outboard, due to those stiffeners and to the fact that too many pilots will sump with the airplane parked on a sideways slope.
There's one in the bottom of the header tank (reservoir), too. On the belly.
I don’t think that the sumping process is onerous with 12 points. Ten of them are right at eye level and only one req that I stoop low and reach under the belly. I rest assured that I have checked all the reasonable locations where water may pool. Count me in the minority that is ok with the numerous sump points.They should have given the engineer that designed this an additional requirement: you must be slapped in the face once for every required sump point checked by every pilot who uses this every time they use it.
Maybe they would have designed it better. I'd rather be slapped twice than 13 times. (per flight taken)
1. Be glad it's not a low-wing airplane.They should have given the engineer that designed this an additional requirement: you must be slapped in the face once for every required sump point checked by every pilot who uses this every time they use it.
Maybe they would have designed it better. I'd rather be slapped twice than 13 times. (per flight taken)
The football dude in the left seat had 9,000 hours…But was McSpadden controlling the airplane? He was in the right seat and the plan was the owner in the left seat would fly the take off and climb, and McSpadden would take the controls when they began the photography. So we don't really know who was at the controls when the return was attempted.
Aside from my father’s CFI who died (and took an entire family with him) running out of fuel on final at night over the mountains, I have to say my grand prize winner was the DPE who died scud-running on his way home from giving a PPL exam at our field. Dan something, heading back to Glens Falls, NY about 20 years ago. Flew a Cherokee wings-level into the side of a mountain 10 miles from his home field.I have to say, its those accidents with the "good" pilots that always gives me pause. One just for example, the recent Cardinal crash with Richard McSpadden. By all accounts, McSpadden was a highly accomplished and experienced aviator, yet he was put in a situation that he didn't escape. When that happens, it often makes me question my abilities and my choices. There have been numerous other examples that have triggered this reaction in me.
Its a lot easier to hear about the "dumb" pilot out doing "stupid" pilot things. Things that I would like to think I have the smarts and experience to avoid, although I know I've done some dumb stuff in the past and luckily lived to tell the tale.
That may well be, but the POH diagram does not show a 13th drain valve anywhere. It should be there, for legal reasons. Something is wrong here.
Good question. I just remember probing 13 drains on a 2005 182T and then a few weeks later scratching my head and spending a few minutes hunting for #13 on a 182S.So where is the "fuel return side sump?" Is that part of the fuel selector valve, which directs returned fuel to the tank it came from? Or is that referring to some late-model 182T that has the header tank under the floor on the copilot's side?
@Sierra_Hotel you teach students to reach in and pull on the magnetos and spark plug wires?Isn't that kind of the entire point of this thread? Teaching proper practices is one thing, but keeping up those practices on your own when you're not in the presence of an instructor is altogether different. Every one of the students at the school I was teaching at was taught a proper preflight and shown things above and beyond the checklist. Whether they keep that up once they're out of our hands is on them.
@Sierra_Hotel you teach students to reach in and pull on the magnetos and spark plug wires?
@Chip Sylverne I’ve never seen anyone do that in Cherokee’s, warriors or Cessnas.
Embarrassed to say I’m not sure I could find the magnetos. But I do pretty much do my pre flight exactly as taught. 30 years l later. Pretty much the same.
And generally taught the same across schools at 4 airports and 8 schools across that time.
That’s the stuff I’d love to know, though. What can really / most likely bite me.
Nope, and that was the point I was getting at, going that far is well beyond a normal preflight for almost any plane, but especially ones where to do so would require removing a cowling. That's not a preflight, that's maintenance. But having a flashlight and looking around in the cowling, definitely.@Sierra_Hotel you teach students to reach in and pull on the magnetos and spark plug wires?