Challenged
Pattern Altitude
My primary RPM gauge is dead, but the one on my JPI is fine. What's the likely culprit? And I'm just curious if you'd personally fly a plane in this condition.
My primary RPM gauge is dead, but the one on my JPI is fine. What's the likely culprit? And I'm just curious if you'd personally fly a plane in this condition.
My primary RPM gauge is dead, but the one on my JPI is fine. What's the likely culprit? And I'm just curious if you'd personally fly a plane in this condition.
Henning....you shoulda been an A&P.
Unless the JPI is a certified primary replacement you're not airworthy.
Underpaid, but fun for a while. I don't mind turning wrenches, and diagnostics are fun, but it's not what I want to do for a living, you have to work and bleed too much.
but....I don't bleed.
It's a cable drive tach, and the JPI is not certified ( but seems to be more accurate and reliable, heh )
Thank you. And all this time I thought you were an A&P.
Then either you're dead, or way more careful than I can bother being. Damn, working on airplanes always had me bleeding. No shortage of sharp sheet metal in tight, blind, places.
You forgot the boneheads who are too cheap to buy a pair of flush-cutters and leave Tywrap ends as sharp as razor blades.
If it's a cable drive tach, I'd look at the cable first, and when you pop it out the back of the head, stick a little screwdriver in the drive socket and give it a spin. Mechanical tachs are dirt simple, if the needle doesn't bounce when you give it a flick/spin, a magnet fell off.
If you spin it backwards will it take hours off of the engine time?
This sort of problem usually pops up just before you land at wherever your A&P works.
I'd have to replace it with a 900 series JPI instead of the 800 series I own.
It was the cable, ordering a replacement.