Tantalum
Final Approach
- Joined
- Feb 22, 2017
- Messages
- 9,250
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San_Diego_Pilot
Pitch for best glide
Look for a landing spot
Communicate
It's pretty simple, if you're on approach with flaps and gear down you pitch down. If you're cruising along happily then apply back pressure and maintain best glide. I probably wouldn't zoom climb, I'd just maintain level altitude until the airspeed bleeds off
PS - engines generally won't just suddenly stop.. I find that's a suspiciously deficient part of general training.. what's more likely to happen is you'll start noticing running rough, fluctuating rpm, issues with manifold pressure, changing oil pressure (losing).. oil on the windscreen.. weird temps, etc. Unless you have a catastrophic failure engines generally don't just hard stop
My only 'engine failure' was self-induced. On the Cirrus the mixture knob is in the center console area near where the passenger sits, the headset cables also come out of the center console.. I had my dad who's not a pilot in the right seat and I was setting up for a long downwind into MYF, just offshore of La Jolla.. well somehow the way my dad moved the cable snagged the mixture and he pretty much cut it off. Engine sounded funny (like surging) felt like someone put the brakes on, and I noticed the fuel flow was at something like 2. My hand automatically went to the mixture knob and put it full rich and the engine instantly came back..
Look for a landing spot
Communicate
It's pretty simple, if you're on approach with flaps and gear down you pitch down. If you're cruising along happily then apply back pressure and maintain best glide. I probably wouldn't zoom climb, I'd just maintain level altitude until the airspeed bleeds off
PS - engines generally won't just suddenly stop.. I find that's a suspiciously deficient part of general training.. what's more likely to happen is you'll start noticing running rough, fluctuating rpm, issues with manifold pressure, changing oil pressure (losing).. oil on the windscreen.. weird temps, etc. Unless you have a catastrophic failure engines generally don't just hard stop
My only 'engine failure' was self-induced. On the Cirrus the mixture knob is in the center console area near where the passenger sits, the headset cables also come out of the center console.. I had my dad who's not a pilot in the right seat and I was setting up for a long downwind into MYF, just offshore of La Jolla.. well somehow the way my dad moved the cable snagged the mixture and he pretty much cut it off. Engine sounded funny (like surging) felt like someone put the brakes on, and I noticed the fuel flow was at something like 2. My hand automatically went to the mixture knob and put it full rich and the engine instantly came back..