I let the engine warm up about a minute while I grab ATIS and run thru my pretaxi list. Then I lean until RPM drop and richen up a half turn.
I too was never taught to lean by my first instructor. On my first solo, I was in a conga line of other trainees. By the time I did my run up, the mag drop was bad. Taxied back and instructor couldn’t clear it up. Next day instructor showed me how to lean and how to clear it up (higher RPM than run up and aggressive leaning, and for about 1-2 minutes).
I have taken off once with it leaned. I was behind an ILS hold line that was a long distance from the RWY threshold at a non towered field. Did my run up. I go full rich for that, and it’s on my checklist. Ready to go. Cross the ILS line and a Lear Jet announces 2 mile base (never said anything before). Cirrus was in the pattern but let’s him in, then it’s the Cirrus’ turn to land. I should have not done this, but I leaned cuz I was sitting there so long; It was a halfazz lean just for the short duration and taxi. I even left my hand on the knob, but forgot about it after the 2nd plane was landing. When I went to enter the runway, I did not go back full rich.
I was not lean enough to stumble on takeoff. At about 1000 ft AGL, I realized the lean condition due to my flow & checklist.
I do have a before takeoff checklist that calls for rich at run up and a second rich check before crossing the hold line. I had already crossed the ILS hold and had no more checklist crutch.
I need to get my pretakeoff flow on. I like the hand on 3 knobs on takeoff. Gonna use that from now on.
The above is typical accident chain stuff. Something changed:
- Long ILS hold short
- Unannounced plane entering the pattern
- A certain amount of distraction for a Lear approaching (VFR day, but am I obstructing the ILS?)
- Delay in takeoff after crossing hold short
- Halfhearted re-lean
- No flow pilot conditioning pre takeoff
- Checklist done/put away after crossing hold short line