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Greg Bockelman
the pa28r-201 has a 10 to 1 glide ratio
Hmm. Ten down for every one forward?
Just kidding.
the pa28r-201 has a 10 to 1 glide ratio
The ones in the F-111 did, as long as we maintained something like 250 KIAS, which was a bit below best glide speed, depending on wing sweep.Turbofan engines will not turn the accessory section when the fan wind mills.
Always heard that the glide ratio of the F4 Phantom was similar to that of a brick.
That was BA9 -- discussed above, over Indonesia. They had three out of four engines running on landing.I think we are talking two different incidents here. There was a 747 that lost all engines over the Pacific due to flying through a volcanic ash cloud. They eventually got at least one engine, maybe all engines, (Don't recall) back online and landed with power.
That was the Canadian one (Air Transat 236) in which a fuel leak developed in the right engine and the crew transferred all their fuel from the good left side to the leaking right side and ran themselves out of gas. The "Gimli Glider" was a 767 operating as Air Canada 143 in which the ground crew short-fueled the jet due to confusion over English vs Metric units, and the fuel was exhausted about halfway to the destination. Both were "dead stick" landings with zero fuel aboard.There was an A-330 that had a dual flameout over the Atlantic in August of 2001. They glided for over 65 miles, starting from about 34,000 feet to a safe landing on the runway at Lajes.
Actually, it was pretty good -- much better than light GA (like 18:1 clean, IIRC), but you were going something north of 250 KIAS, so the rate of descent was eye-watering.Always heard that the glide ratio of the F4 Phantom was similar to that of a brick.
How do you get that glider in the air?
Anyway glad to hear my Arrow doesn't glide like a rock, I didn't remember that information in the POH.
I would guess that things are kinda slow around your airport this time of the year (or maybe not, I dunno. They sure are around here!) Might be a great time to get a CFI and learn more about power-off landings.
The Dakota (PA28-236) AIM glide chart shows about 7:1
The lesson to be taken from that one is not so much one of engine-out landing proficiency but rather making sure that your fuel tanks never fill with air.
Even at idle the engine is making power. It is close, but not the same as no engine. If you lose the engine altogether keep an eye on the airspeed. You will definitely need to put the nose down more to keep AS up. The prop is real draggy when not turning.
Something that I just cannot understand...Pilots running out of fuel.
Before I was even able to ride a bicycle, it was burned into my brain to always know how much fuel you have. My grandfather was and is OCD about this. I could never grasp how others would even chance running out of fuel.
I'm glad that Cherokee thing got sorted out. If someone actually had the numbers it would be interesting to see.
I wasn't assuming that there was a difference in high wing vs low wing, but after the Cherokee comments I was just beginning to wonder.
My other suspicions seem to be confirmed...altitude is your friend, keeping up airspeed, most efficient glide speed, etc.
What stands out now is the comment about just one more pilot being able to do it, and one of the reasons I wonder about this so much...there was just another thread started a little while ago about a pilot who ran out of fuel, resulting in a fatal crash, which seems like something that happens a little more than it should.
I just don't understand why or how they cannot land the airplane if it's out of fuel, one of the reasons I brought this up.
power loaded wing. That is basically a Cherokee with 235hp so the GW is 2900 lbs where as the identical plane in a Cherokee 140 has a 2150 GW. So that extra 750 lbs tends to bring you down a good deal faster.
Best glide on the Cherokee is 83-84mph. I suspect it is 105-110 on the Dakota.
I read that high wing aircraft have more fuel out landings. It is easier to check your fuel visually with a low wing. I would have to install those clear glass fuel gauges if I had a high wing and i would be too lazy to climb up every single time to visually check the fuel level.
Nope, 85mph for best glide in our Dakota
The common pilot error of running out of fuel is about 1/3 of all GA accidents, last I checked in the Nall Report. If a pilot is negligent enough to do that, then I suggest he may be negligent and deficient in other simple skills of piloting expertise, such as gliding in an airplane to a relatively flat landing in a good spot, rather than at a more accute angle or in a bad spot.
These skills are reviewed in ground school and practiced many times in flight training and are always then tested to FAA PTSs. Some airplanes land much better with power, with those models having an engine out glide, a "swooping down" towards the ground (pitching down) to get into ground effect with sufficiently more airspeed will provide a smoother, more survivable landing at a suitable spot, often with no damage or injury. Typical training aircraft are not like that.
Some routes demand flight over hostile terrain, where there are simply no good off-airport landing sites. Good engine out landing skills are even more important in that environment to prevent or reduce injury, even though the aircraft will be significantly damaged.
Well, I don't know if I'd use the term "making power". "Reducing drag" maybe. To me "making power" means propelling the aircraft. I don't *think* an engine idling at 500rpm is propeling an aircraft doing 80kts. All I *think* it's doing is helping to spin the prop so the air doesn't have to do it alone...hence reducing drag.
With that said. I have CS prop and, when I "pull" the prop with a dead engine, the glide ratio is almost identical to that of when the engine is idling and the prop set to high RPM...as is the case when flying the pattern.
ROFLMAO, Imagining the exhaust port from the two horses polluting your flying air.
The prop on the Arrow is like a speed break. Lots of drag.
Flat plate drag applies to all aircraft with controllable speed props, not just Arrows.
Bob Gardner
Even at idle the engine is making power. It is close, but not the same as no engine. If you lose the engine altogether keep an eye on the airspeed. You will definitely need to put the nose down more to keep AS up. The prop is real draggy when not turning.
A prop that is not turning has very little drag. A windmilling prop has quite a bit of drag, proportional to the area of it's swept disc.
Unless those props have full feathering capability.
A prop that is not turning has very little drag. A windmilling prop has quite a bit of drag, proportional to the area of it's swept disc.
I am assuming from TheTraveler's posts that he is referring to single-engine planes. If there is a non-turboprop single with a feathering prop I am unaware of it.
Bob
I am assuming from TheTraveler's posts that he is referring to single-engine planes. If there is a non-turboprop single with a feathering prop I am unaware of it.
Bob
Fair enough. I mean no offense here, but if I had a lazy day where I didn't climb up and look at the fuel, it may not be a good idea to fly that day.
faster?
These are things that are always in the back of my mind, and I don't even have my ticket yet. I don't understand why they wouldn't be in the back of others minds as well with even more experience.
First, things look different a few years and hundreds of hours out of flight school.
Second, if every pilot flew the way your preach their would be less accidents.
High wing fuel check is PITA.
Something that I just cannot understand...Pilots running out of fuel.
Before I was even able to ride a bicycle, it was burned into my brain to always know how much fuel you have. My grandfather was and is OCD about this. I could never grasp how others would even chance running out of fuel.
Ask any pilot who has run; ut of fuel and they will tell you they didn't plan on it. Headwinds, getthereitis, relying on fuel gages, trying to save .50 a gallon, having a mag go bad in flight, forgetting to lean the engine, fuel leak, broken fuel line, and simply misjudging distance.
This came up in a conversation recently, and it's something that I have been extremely curious of...landing without engine power. Engine failure, out of fuel, or whatever the reason, as far as I've been told, it should technically be possible to glide, and land, any airplane without power.
What I would like to know is not in theory, but in practice and reality, how difficult is this to do?
I'm sure the debate could go on and on about where to actually land the aircraft if there isn't an airport or landing strip nearby. There's also the conversation about doing this at night, hoping that dark spot isn't a lake. I don't want to avoid those debatable variants, but the main question, making a few assumptions...
1. Controls are still intact, but engine has failed
2. It's daytime
3. You are in a relatively flat area, with few obstructions
4. You are in very reasonable weather
-How practical, and how difficult is it to actually land the plane without engine power?
-Does this differ with high-wing vs. low-wing?
-If you have done this, has it been a scary situation, trying to keep control without power? Or a calm, quiet situation, just kind of minding your own business, and gliding back down to land?
I am really interested in hearing what everyone says about this.
My reference to running out of fuel was strictly focused on the human error part.
There are many of us pilots that were taught to close the throttle at the down wind to base turn and leave it closed for landing.
Dragging a plane across the numbers