Me too.FWIW I do all of my planning with a 1 hour reserve
Me too.FWIW I do all of my planning with a 1 hour reserve
This.
My only issue with flying that low on fuel in my DA20 is that the gauge has a nifty pucker factor feature, once you get close to a quarter tank of fuel it'll swing in the yellow caution area back and forth a bit which compels you to put it on the ground sooner than later. Once I'm near ~6gal or so I make sure I'm awfully close to the field.
I think everyone is hung up on what seems a low quantity. If he said he landed with 15 gallons of fuel in something with a TIO-520/40/50 no one would say a thing.
Ok, I've just put some numbers together and see something that I think the OP either wasn't pointing out or was just missed.
His departure time was 6:30 from Atlanta. According to Skyvector, at 130 kts that's a 2:20 flight from Fulton Cty to Sanford, with arrival around 8:50, maybe 9:00 with 5 gallons of fuel on board. But sunset was at 8:15. His arrival was at night by plan. At 8 gph at low altitudes, he had 5/8 of an hour of fuel on board.
Does that change anything for the instructor to call and say "Hey, you landed our airplane with too little fuel"?
No, over half an hour left over is perfectly acceptable by all counts, even the FAA's standard for how much planned reserve. It may have warranted a call asking, "Did you realize you only had 5 gallons left?", not some freaking out diatribe.
I also consider this prior post by the OP where he knows better than his instructor on how to execute steep turns in the DA-20....
I have an IO-540 that burns 10.5-11.0 gph at 160kt cruise. So that would be like me landing with 8-9 gallons. No way, intentionally
Even after sunset? If you arrive at night, then you'll be flying into your reserve at night so i presume 45 minutes is required.
And perhaps he was calling in both the capacity of the instructor and an employee of the rental company.
And when the FBO topped off the plane, they very well may have filled it to the brim and not to the bottom of the filler neck.. That alone means they could have "stuffed" a gallon of more to each side so to make it look like it took alot of fuel.... The OP could have landed with 7 gallons, and that would NOT have triggered the call from the instructor.....
When I did my 9D9->SRQ trip in my Comanche, I dry tanked the tips, and based on the math was burning 11.4gph - which agreed with what the JPI said I was burning. I burned on the left tank for an hour plus (was also my climb tank) and then dry tanked the right tank. I had the calculations done, I knew how much was in the left, and where my right tank should have went dry. I was within 5nm of where I expected the engine to cough and I had 20ish minutes to go on the flight.
This is a plane you have been flying for a long time, you have plenty of total hours, years of weather experience and a fuel totalizer.
A very different scenario from a 40hr PPL with some portable electronics taking his girlfriend on a flight into the evening with 4.5gallons useable sloshing in his tank.
At the time I hadn't even had the plane a year. But I was more addressing Wayne's comment of never going below an hour of fuel. If you know what you have and where it's at, what's the issue?
This is a plane you have been flying for a long time, you have plenty of total hours, years of weather experience and a fuel totalizer.
A very different scenario from a 40hr PPL with some portable electronics taking his girlfriend on a flight into the evening with 4.5gallons useable sloshing in his tank.
This is a plane you have been flying for a long time, you have plenty of total hours, years of weather experience and a fuel totalizer.
A very different scenario from a 40hr PPL with some portable electronics taking his girlfriend on a flight into the evening with 4.5gallons useable sloshing in his tank.
Highly experienced pilots look at things differently from lowly experienced pilots. Most in this thread are trying to say, "be careful, grasshopper".
I am not 'highly experienced', I just know that flying yourself out of fuel in a rental is a dumb way to die.
The CFI called him and had a private conversation. He didn't give him a dressing-down in the FBO lobby in front of the assembled staff and students.
Kids these days First they fly around with their newfangled blue-tooth ADS-B thingmajigs and think they are invincible, then when someone asks them questions, they run off to the internet to complain.
Now I have to go and shoo some kids off my lawn.
Even after sunset? If you arrive at night, then you'll be flying into your reserve at night so i presume 45 minutes is required.
And perhaps he was calling in both the capacity of the instructor and an employee of the rental company.
yes....he could have died.
The instructor may have commented on the OP's fuel situation because he cares about the OP. Or the instructor may have been a busybody. We can't tell with only one side of the story. Some people don't respond well to unsolicited advice and some people don't give it in a tactful way.
If I were to have said anything as the instructor, and I probably wouldn't have, but it would have probably went something like this:
"Yo, Marco, what's shakin' man?"
"Uh, who is this?"
"Your old CFI, what's going down?"
"Nothing much."
"Wrong answer. You if you don't watch your fuel management, brah!"
"Hey, I see you flew the plane last night, was it a good flight?"
"Yeah, pretty good, joined the half mile club with my gf."
"Only went to 2640, eh?"
"No, was at 5280, but I just had her take her top off."
"Ha! Gotcha. Speaking of topping off, do you know how much fuel we put in after your flight?"
"Oh, I would have to say, I probably had 5-6 gallons left when we landed, that's like 25 gallons or so you put in I should have had 45 mins of fuel left if I did the numbers right."
"Alright, just checkin' out for ya. Oh, and just for the record going to 10,560 and having her go topless doesn't count as the mile high club either, I'm out!"
Sorry, I wasn't clear. We are in violent agreement. Of all the stupid things I have done in my many decades of flying in peace and in war, the absolute stupidest was running low on fuel when I didn't have to. In a rental, as it turns out.
The lawyers have answered that one.I think everyone agrees with that. The question is, what is "running low on fuel"?
The instructor may have commented on the OP's fuel situation because he cares about the OP. Or the instructor may have been a busybody. We can't tell with only one side of the story. Some people don't respond well to unsolicited advice and some people don't give it in a tactful way.
You could also consider that the instructor is an employee of the rental organization, who probably has a strong interest in their airplane not running out of fuel.
Yup...The lawyers have answered that one.
I propose working out a more practical solution. Let's set some boundry conditions on the definition.
1) if then engine dies from fuel starvation which doesn't include pulling the mixture then that is definitely "running low on fuel"
2) if one lands with textbook reserves as planned in a textbook situation (weather, alternates, etc.) then that is not "running running low on fuel"
if you wind up somewheres between 1 and 2 then maybe you were "running low on fuel"
Exactly. I think I read he has 90 hrs, but just the same. I doubt he has a fuel totalizer, as I did not see that mentioned previously.Foreflight gives you a total fuel number with tenths, but I have to plug in 12 gph for it to even be close, and then it is only for planning purposes.
The lawyers have answered that one.
I propose working out a more practical solution. Let's set some boundry conditions on the definition.
1) if then engine dies from fuel starvation which doesn't include pulling the mixture then that is definitely "running low on fuel"
2) if one lands with textbook reserves as planned in a textbook situation (weather, alternates, etc.) then that is not "running running low on fuel"
if you wind up somewheres between 1 and 2 then maybe you were "running low on fuel"
I wouldn't have called either. What are you supposed to say? "I see you landed with more than the required reserve, what's up with that?"
It would be like a cop stopping you for doing 70 in a 70 mph zone and letting you off with a warning.
I wouldn't have called either. What are you supposed to say? "I see you landed with more than the required reserve, what's up with that?"
It would be like a cop stopping you for doing 70 in a 70 mph zone and letting you off with a warning.
"Hey, you landed our airplane with too little fuel"?
You're starting with a presumption that there wasn't an infraction. There might have been. The OP left Atlanta at 6:30 and landed at KTTA something like 30-45 minutes after sunset. 5 gallons on a 8gph plan is not 45 minutes of reserve required for night flying.
What are you supposed to say? You left 5 gallons in the airplane, you didn't refuel it and you landed with less than the legal fuel reserve. I'm sure I covered each of these points.
You're starting with a presumption that there wasn't an infraction. There might have been. The OP left Atlanta at 6:30 and landed at KTTA something like 30-45 minutes after sunset. 5 gallons on a 8gph plan is not 45 minutes of reserve required for night flying.
What are you supposed to say? You left 5 gallons in the airplane, you didn't refuel it and you landed with less than the legal fuel reserve. I'm sure I covered each of these points.