danielabernath
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danielabernath
You took up with 2.5 gallons of useable fuel on board.
Wrong
Wrong
Poh says 1 gal is unusable, so you had 2.5 usable, that's 30 min worth of fuel. Per FAR 91.151 that's Not enough to legally take off.
comment. You are incorrect. "facts are stubborn things"
You took up with 2.5 gallons of useable fuel on board.
Wrong
what was the quantity of usable fuel remaining ?
I've answered that question. You all want to make up things and then say that I was not in compliance with FAR.
Issue: Even if what you say is true, how does that prove or disprove anything at issue in this litigation?
CTSW's with 8 GALLONS in one tank and no fuel the other tank suffered from fuel starvation. (Read the complaint, would ya? www.aspecialdayguide.com/bernathresume.htm )
Fuel gauges only indicate usable fuel.
what was the quantity of usable fuel remaining ?
I've answered that question. You all want to make up things and then say that I was not in compliance with FAR.
Issue: Even if what you say is true, how does that prove or disprove anything at issue in this litigation?
CTSW's with 8 GALLONS in one tank and no fuel the other tank suffered from fuel starvation. (Read the complaint, would ya? www.aspecialdayguide.com/bernathresume.htm )
Exactly how much usable fuel, based on time, did you actually have left in the tanks?
Read the official documents:
"The fuel guage said between 3 to 5 gallons.
The stick from Flight Design said 3.5 gallons.
OR34 to Sisters Eagle Airport."
FD says that 5 gallons an hour fuel consumption.
Except for the secret, intentionally hidden Fight Design-defect there was enough fuel. I did not run out of fuel. Simple.
Read the official documents:
"The fuel guage said between 3 to 5 gallons.
The stick from Flight Design said 3.5 gallons.
OR34 to 6K5."
FD says that 5 gallons an hour fuel consumption.
A direct answer to the direct questions. Very good. We are getting somewhere. Thank you.
If that was the amount actually in the tanks, then yes, you had enough in the ONE TANK to get there. Unfortunately, by your own admission, there was no fuel in the other tank, therefore any fuel system deriving its source of fuel from a combination of two fuel tanks requires that the fuel combining area remain full of fuel. Any uncoordinated maneuver, even for brief periods of time, can unport that area rather quickly. Knowing that one tank is empty should prompt you to either transfer fuel to even the load out, or make sure that the fullest tank remains higher than the empty tank by deliberately flying uncoordinated in the opposite direction.
I fly an aircraft that has two engines and three fuel tanks. I have to constantly monitor the third tank, because, even if the other tanks are full, if the third tank runs out, it can be pretty disastrous. The other tanks can have more than twenty gallons of unusable fuel in depending on the attitude of the aircraft. If I am on an extended descent, I can have over 40 gallons of fuel that is unusable in that attitude. That, sir, is what is called, "knowing your aircraft's systems." You need to try that.
The Flite Design is not the only aircraft with that type of fuel design. And coordinated flying is not always accomplished, even when you try. Seeing how uneven your tanks empty is a good thing to learn in your aircraft, so that you don't end up emptying a tank and attempting to "run on empty."
Flight Design CTSW crashed with 8 gallons in one tank.
Lets say there is a FAR that say I have to have my airplane number on the tail and I said, "I don't like that FAR so I'm going to paint over it."
In my hypothetical: My painting over the tail number, although a violation, has nothing to do with the fuel starvation caused by Flight Design, its failure to warn, its failure to instruct, its intentional decision to put US pilot's lives in danger by not telling US pilots of the danger and the instruction to deal with the defect as ordered to by the CAA.
Again, I violated no FAR. "Facts are stubborn things."
A direct answer to the direct questions. Very good. We are getting somewhere. Thank you.
If that was the amount actually in the tanks, then yes, you had enough in the ONE TANK to get there. Unfortunately, by your own admission, there was no fuel in the other tank, therefore any fuel system deriving its source of fuel from a combination of two fuel tanks requires that the fuel combining area remain full of fuel. Any uncoordinated maneuver, even for brief periods of time, can unport that area rather quickly. Knowing that one tank is empty should prompt you to either transfer fuel to even the load out, or make sure that the fullest tank remains higher than the empty tank by deliberately flying uncoordinated in the opposite direction.
I fly an aircraft that has two engines and three fuel tanks. I have to constantly monitor the third tank, because, even if the other tanks are full, if the third tank runs out, it can be pretty disastrous. The other tanks can have more than twenty gallons of unusable fuel in depending on the attitude of the aircraft. If I am on an extended descent, I can have over 40 gallons of fuel that is unusable in that attitude. That, sir, is what is called, "knowing your aircraft's systems." You need to try that.
The Flite Design is not the only aircraft with that type of fuel design. And coordinated flying is not always accomplished, even when you try. Seeing how uneven your tanks empty is a good thing to learn in your aircraft, so that you don't end up emptying a tank and attempting to "run on empty."
__________________
Bryon
So you're not going to explain how you were in compliance with 91.151?
You took up with 2.5 gallons of useable fuel on board.
Wrong
Again a Flight Design CTSW suffered crashing fuel starvation with EIGHT GALLONS in one tank.
So you're not going to explain how you were in compliance with 91.151?
1. I was in compliance. Read the facts.
2. Even if what you allege is true (it isn't) it is irrelevant to Flight Designs egregious conduct. Again a Flight Design CTSW suffered crashing fuel starvation with EIGHT GALLONS in one tank.
That is based on your own statements. If you have 3.5 gallons in one tank, you have at best 2.5 gallons useable.
Some regulations are silly. Others like the fuel reserve rules are written in blood.
More to the point, 5 GPH is at cruise. Don't forget that there is Taxi & Run up, plus the climb to account for. He was under 30 minutes reserve long before he started.You said the fuel stick said 3.5 gallons. The POH says 1 gallon is unusable. At 5GPH that's 30 minutes worth of fuel. Please explain how you were legal to fly in compliance with 91.151. No one here can see how. Please explain. Most of us aren't lawyers and could use the advice.
Some regulations are silly. Others like the fuel reserve rules are written in blood.
So are products liability class action lawsuits against aircraft manufacturers who don't care if you live or die as long as they make a profit (Flight Design www.aspecialdayguide.com/bernathresume.htm )
McGee v. Cessna is another recent example. Cessna just made up numbers out of the blue for the POH. Caravan Passengers died. Lawsuits do good things.
I find it interesting that you refuse to state how much fuel was in the tank after landing. You did look, didn't you? Is that what those pictures of the fuel stains on the wing are for? Are we to believe that all the fuel was forced out of the tank through the vent due to impact?
Just to pick at nits: the regs say you need the 30 min reserve before you take off, not after you land.
>>
§ 91.151 Fuel requirements for flight in VFR conditions.
(a) No person may begin a flight in an airplane under VFR conditions unless (considering wind and forecast weather conditions) there is enough fuel to fly to the first point of intended landing and, assuming normal cruising speed—
(1) During the day, to fly after that for at least 30 minutes;
...
<<
Does the POH (like some I've seen) give the estimates of fuel burn during startup and taxi?
How much fuel was actually left in the tanks?
Again (and again) the fuel starvation occured NOT because there wasn't enough fuel.
More to the point, 5 GPH is at cruise. Don't forget that there is Taxi & Run up, plus the climb to account for. He was under 30 minutes reserve long before he started.
Daniel,
As the PIC YOU are responsible for knowing your aircraft's systems. If your aircraft does not have a fuel selector switch it is the your job to ensure that you never run one tank completely dry. It does not take an aeronautical engineer to figure that out. No one needs to hold your hand and tell you this. Know your systems or don't fly.
I still cannot get past the fact that you did a precautionary landing because you were low on fuel, but then took off again. It's a fool's game and you let yourself get suckered into it. I landed for fuel one night only to find out that the FBO was closed and fuel was not available. I could have taken off again in search of fuel. Instead I grabbed my pillow and blanket, and slept in the crew van for the night. Guess what? I arrived at home alive and am still able to fly that aircraft.
I know that you have no intention of learning from anyone on this forum. My advice for you is to give up flying. Do it for yourself. Do it for your wife.
-Jim
He took off with 30 min worth of fuel. He was illegal the second he departed.
You can't become illegal in the air after taking off legally.
He won't be discussing how much was left in the tanks.
I still cannot get past the fact that you did a precautionary landing because you were low on fuel, but then took off again.
Again (and again) the fuel starvation occured NOT because there wasn't enough fuel. There was enough fuel for another half hour of flight. It was the design defect of the CTSW of which I was not warned and not instructed.
Please remember that ten or 12 CTSW's have crashed because one tank was empty and the other had 8 gallons (for one example).
Are all those pilots, stupid poo poo heads as well? Is the CAA stupid Poo Poo Heads because they ordered Flight Design to instruct pilots on the dangerous propensities of their CTSW and how to avoid dying?
I think some of these guys are putting me on.
Fuel was in the tank for another 30 minutes of flight.
Crash had nothing to do with the amount of fuel in the tank but with Flight Designs KNOWN TO THEM design defect. Simple.
He might have looked, but to accurately stick the tanks, the aircraft has to be level.
Good luck explaining to a jury how you landed due to fuel conserns, then departed without refueling in direct violation of a regulation written to protect against fuel exhaustion. Then more luck explaining to them how a ctsw won't fly with 8 gallons in one tank yet you managed to get one airborne with only 3.5.
dismiss your complaint, (sure, hand me a check)