MotleyCrew
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Motley Flight Crew
How to take the bite off an engine failure on takeoff
Hi everybody,
I'm sure I must be missing something here - or else I would not understand why any single engine pilot would depart a runway differently. After 15 years of piloting single-engine wing things, I have not had an engine failure in flight - but on the ground. And - guess what - it gets you thinking. What if the engine fails aloft? What if it's your only engine? Or, even worse, what if your only engine decides to quit on you on your initial climb out?
We're trained to land straight ahead. Bummer.
I guess this is the single point of most miserable failure in any single engine aircraft - engine failure on takeoff. Countless lives were lost in attempts to turn back to the runway.
Here's my thoughts on it: Why not depart the runway with a procedure turn? That way, you would already, while you still have normal power, begin the turn back to the runway should the unfortunate event occur that you would lose engine power. I would then continue to climb straight over the runway I had just departed from, and by the end of the runway, I should have sufficient height to turn back even gliding.
I can't even start to think of all the potential benefits:
1) You start your turn as you still have power. The chances of a stall/spin are lower than when turning while windmilling.
2) If, as in 99% of cases, everything goes well, you just climb straight along the runway and you're on your way, maybe having invested an additional two minutes for your procedure turn. I would think a cheap insurance.
3) If the sucker does quit on you, all you have to do is land straight ahead - but it will be straight ahead onto the runway
4) If the sucker quits on you later in the climb, you will already have climbed sufficiently to simply enter a downwind and land without power.
Once en route, your options are many. But a procedure turn right after departure, on initial climb, and climb on the back course along the departure runway is exactly what I would do.
What am I missing here? Why wouldn't any single engine jockey do it just like that?
Hi everybody,
I'm sure I must be missing something here - or else I would not understand why any single engine pilot would depart a runway differently. After 15 years of piloting single-engine wing things, I have not had an engine failure in flight - but on the ground. And - guess what - it gets you thinking. What if the engine fails aloft? What if it's your only engine? Or, even worse, what if your only engine decides to quit on you on your initial climb out?
We're trained to land straight ahead. Bummer.
I guess this is the single point of most miserable failure in any single engine aircraft - engine failure on takeoff. Countless lives were lost in attempts to turn back to the runway.
Here's my thoughts on it: Why not depart the runway with a procedure turn? That way, you would already, while you still have normal power, begin the turn back to the runway should the unfortunate event occur that you would lose engine power. I would then continue to climb straight over the runway I had just departed from, and by the end of the runway, I should have sufficient height to turn back even gliding.
I can't even start to think of all the potential benefits:
1) You start your turn as you still have power. The chances of a stall/spin are lower than when turning while windmilling.
2) If, as in 99% of cases, everything goes well, you just climb straight along the runway and you're on your way, maybe having invested an additional two minutes for your procedure turn. I would think a cheap insurance.
3) If the sucker does quit on you, all you have to do is land straight ahead - but it will be straight ahead onto the runway
4) If the sucker quits on you later in the climb, you will already have climbed sufficiently to simply enter a downwind and land without power.
Once en route, your options are many. But a procedure turn right after departure, on initial climb, and climb on the back course along the departure runway is exactly what I would do.
What am I missing here? Why wouldn't any single engine jockey do it just like that?
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