Well I don't know how much fuel his airplane burns. I'm just going by what he said. That said, 30 minutes is planning only. You can fly into your reserve fuel. I'm not advocating skimping on fuel, but I will say this... It's not often the airliner you take on vacation has double the required reserves.But it was the instructor who indicated 5 gallons left.
My money says it was based on how many gallons went in the tank.
But lets assume it really was 5 usable gallons. That's still shy of the 45 minutes that OP believes he landed with, by 7.5 minutes.
Legal? Sure.
Safe? Marginally.
Over confident? Starting to wonder... after all, the OP is in the fateful first 100 hours.
But it was the instructor who indicated 5 gallons left.
My money says it was based on how many gallons went in the tank.
But lets assume it really was 5 usable gallons. That's still shy of the 45 minutes that OP believes he landed with, by 7.5 minutes.
Legal? Sure.
Safe? Marginally.
Over confident? Starting to wonder... after all, the OP is in the fateful first 100 hours.
Look, all I'm saying is, the OP is an admittedly new and inexperienced pilot and running even CLOSE to light on fuel is a very very bad habit to get into.
I'd rather the OP feel embarrassed, self conscious, etc and NEVER fly that light on fuel again than say, 'Nah you're fine' and brush it off. We all know weather doesn't exactly always go as plans. What if the winds went against him by a mere few more miles an hour than predicted on that "nearly burned all my fuel" leg of his trip?
No one can offer a logical reason why, under the conditions described by the OP, his decision was bad. We are discussing the conditions and pilot actions of the OP, correct?
But it was the instructor who indicated 5 gallons left.
My money says it was based on how many gallons went in the tank.
I wonder if the OP ran LOP....if that could have added an extra 3-4 gallons?
The real discussion should be why his 'ex' CFI is snooping into his current flights. .
The real discussion should be why his 'ex' CFI is snooping into his current flights. He was PIC on the flight, not the CFI. If/when the CFI gets a job with the FAA, maybe it will matter more at that point.
No one can offer a logical reason why
NoSo because they chewed your butt you quit flying?
...
The people that I can't stand are the ones who would watch someone do dangerous stuff, but never confront the person about it,
I think you mean "You disagree with the other opinions", which is a very different condition than what you put forth.
If some of us are concerned that flying that close to the reserve is a marginal decision and potentially a precursor to a bad habit, then it's perfectly logical for us to discourage it.
Am I in the wrong?
Is it okay for him to call me and essentially B*%ch me out?
In the other hand, I understand his concern but maybe approach me different?
I still think I didnt make a "wrong decision" but please chime in..
Edit: I started changing the subject and we had a 30 minute conversation about flying and his new students, etc..
I'm not mad at him, but I just felt like he was giving me a hard time without knowing all of the facts.
Once again, if I am wrong, I am wrong
The OP's pushing at the edge of an awfully dangerous envelope.
If you get comfortable landing with 5 gallons left, you will someday run into an unforeseen circumstance and will run it empty. I know from personal experience.
The OP played by the rules and did nothing wrong. If the speed limit on the highway is 70, and someone is doing 65, do we say they are driving dangerously?If you get comfortable landing with 5 gallons left, you will someday run into an unforeseen circumstance and will run it empty. I know from personal experience.
If you get comfortable landing with 5 gallons left, you will someday run into an unforeseen circumstance and will run it empty. I know from personal experience.
Maybe the CFI had a flight the next morning in the same airplane and noticed how much fuel it took?
Correct. Only to PLAN on having fuel in the tanks.
Maybe. So he either calls for fuel, or goes to self-serve and puts it in.
Your instructor is an idiot and he does not belong in the sky if 45 minutes of reserve caused him to be so concerned that he had to call you and project his ineptness onto you.
Wow.... landing with legal fuel and everyone goes ballistic....almost.
...What if the winds went against him by a mere few more miles an hour than predicted on that "nearly burned all my fuel" leg of his trip?
Pilots should be updating their ETA as they go along, so that they can stop somewhere closer and refuel if need be.
What good is an opinion that is not based on the facts at hand? The OP detailed what he did . I don't see anything he did that could lead to a bad habit .
I'm a little confused here. OP said he was burning 8gph and landed with 5 left. If .5 of that was unusable that's 4.5 usable.
But 45 minutes is 3/4 of an hour and 3/4 of 8 is 6, so he'd need 6.5 of total fuel to have 6 usable and thus have a 45 minute reserve.
My math says he had 33.75m reserve.
Most here are judging the OP against their personal minimum. You really should be judging him against the set standard. If his personal reserve minimum is less than yours, but still at or above the set standard, he did nothing wrong.
I agree with this.
I got a similar call once after the flight school pumped 36 gallons into the 172 that held 38 gallons usable. That almost sucked.
Your instructor cared enough to ask about the situation or the office beat him up about his 'risky' ex student. If he took a more gentle approach - how was the flight, tell me about the return, etc., you would be telling us about this great instructor caring about former students.
If one of my students, or low time ex, came back just above min fuel I too would wonder if it was luck or great instruction .
I've not seen my old CFI in 3+ months. I was PICWho was PIC on the flight? You or your old CFI?
Do you now think your decision was wrong? Given the facts you presented, what was wrong with your decision?
I use a fuel stick, but I top off everywhere I go.. and by top off I mean TOP OFF! Fuel in the down-stem of the fuel tank..If your plans showed landing with 5 gallons it isn't an issue. With the da20 or c150 you do need to be conservative because you can't switch tanks once you run dry. Landing with 5 gallons remaining did feel different at first, compared to landing with 10-15 in a c172 or c182 which is pretty much the same thing.
Do they have a fuel stick for the da20 you fly or do you top off before each flight?
What realistic scenarios has anyone presented that makes you doubt your decision making process?
They do notDoes the FBO have any operating rules regarding fuel minimums? I know some rental outfits recommend landing with a 1 hour minimum and others require it in their rental agreement.
You were fine as long as that's all usable fuel.
Funny, never watched the movie... Fiancee and I have movie date night tonight and she picked "airplane"!30 min reserve is not something I would do but it is your call as PIC. After all you are the boss, head man, top dog, big cheese, head honcho.
https://www.youtube.com/watch?v=0yC4gm_vN3s
Pilots should be updating their ETA as they go along, so that they can stop somewhere closer and refuel if need be.
As I said, when they top me off, there is fuel in the down-stem which is close to a gallon.And all they know is they put "USABLE FUEL - 5 gallons" into the tank on top off. It's quite possible on a lot of aircraft to overfill the tanks. There may indeed have been more than 5 gallons usable there.
I truly do appreciate his advice+1. Thank him for the thoughtful attention he gave you. My bet is that you have been taught something that you'll think about on every flight you take from now on. Aviators (generally) like to do things right, and a pilot's response to someone's ( esp. CFI) disapproval tells a lot about the pilot's mettle. Forget the "hurt feelings;" you are now imprinted with an important lesson (or, at least a critical consideration). Blessings
Thank you! I felt as if I was being chewed out based on his personal minimumsMost here are judging the OP against their personal minimum. You really should be judging him against the set standard. If his personal reserve minimum is less than yours, but still at or above the set standard, he did nothing wrong.
Thank you sir. Everytime I fly by an airfield, I locate the next closest airfield, come up with an ETA, download the airport charts/ A/FD (If I dont have them already) and look at the weather for that specific airport.My only concern with the situation was the get there it is. That's what kills pilots, and pax, regarding fuel issues. If there were places to land within 10-40min earlier than the destination and he recognized he may need a quick fuel stop then that not so bad. If he was blindly flying along ~45min from becoming a glider with no plan, like when L tank goes dry I land immediately, than to me that's what will kill. Always have an out. At least 1 preferably 5 or more...
Chalk it up to experience and move on.