Jay Honeck
Touchdown! Greaser!
I have never been very religious about using a pitot cover, mostly due to sheer laziness. I've been known to park in the North 40 at OSH for 8 days without one, with no ill effects.
So on Tuesday we flew to Marfa, TX. for some R&R, after a wonderful night in San Antonio with friends.
Marfa is on the high desert of Southwest Texas. It's where the movies "Giant", "No Country for Old Men", "There Will Be Blood", and "Sylvester" were filmed, mostly because of its starkly beautiful, desolate landscape.
Here's an example of the terrain, as seen on climb-out:
Anyhow, we were there for a grand total of 48 hours. When I parked the plane on Tuesday, I neglected to put the pitot tube cover on. As I was walking away, I noticed, but thought "Meh, what could live out here?" (It was 98 degrees, with no signs of life anywhere. The moon looked more lifelike.)
When we departed this morning, I noticed that I had no airspeed -- neither the EFIS nor the backup instrument (indicating a pitot failure) -- right around the time I was rotating. I flew the pattern, had Mary call out GPS ground speeds to me (like a good flight engineer), and landed uneventfully.
On my RV-8A, the pitot tube really IS a tube. Basically, it's a piece of 1/4" tubing with a 90 degree bend in it, held on to an AN fitting on the bottom of the left wing with a nut. I looked in the pitot tube and saw no obstructions. I even blew into it, and tried lightly sucking on it -- and noted no abnormal (or icky) stuff.
So, we took off again -- and still had no airspeed. By now I had rediscovered that my EFIS conveniently displayed GPS ground speed right underneath where airspeed would normally be displayed, so I flew onto our destination, Uvalde, TX.
This is what the instruments looked like:
I found it interesting that the EFIS airspeed ribbon failed at the top of the airspeed range. This is opposite the steam gauge, which (or course) displayed zero when dead.
At Uvalde I got the tools out and removed the pitot tube from the aircraft (I love experimental planes) and tried to blow through it. Nothing, nada, zilch -- it was 100% clogged.
I took a piece of safety wire, and carefully reamed out a yellowish goo that looked like insect guts, or eggs, or something. Incredibly, in just 48 hours on that ramp in the desert, something had moved in and clogged that tube.
After reaming, here's what the instruments looked like on the next leg home:
100% normal.
Moral of the story: Use that pitot cover when you're parked outside for any length of time. You might get away without using one for a few decades, like me, but sooner or later bugs really will take up residence.
So on Tuesday we flew to Marfa, TX. for some R&R, after a wonderful night in San Antonio with friends.
Marfa is on the high desert of Southwest Texas. It's where the movies "Giant", "No Country for Old Men", "There Will Be Blood", and "Sylvester" were filmed, mostly because of its starkly beautiful, desolate landscape.
Here's an example of the terrain, as seen on climb-out:
Anyhow, we were there for a grand total of 48 hours. When I parked the plane on Tuesday, I neglected to put the pitot tube cover on. As I was walking away, I noticed, but thought "Meh, what could live out here?" (It was 98 degrees, with no signs of life anywhere. The moon looked more lifelike.)
When we departed this morning, I noticed that I had no airspeed -- neither the EFIS nor the backup instrument (indicating a pitot failure) -- right around the time I was rotating. I flew the pattern, had Mary call out GPS ground speeds to me (like a good flight engineer), and landed uneventfully.
On my RV-8A, the pitot tube really IS a tube. Basically, it's a piece of 1/4" tubing with a 90 degree bend in it, held on to an AN fitting on the bottom of the left wing with a nut. I looked in the pitot tube and saw no obstructions. I even blew into it, and tried lightly sucking on it -- and noted no abnormal (or icky) stuff.
So, we took off again -- and still had no airspeed. By now I had rediscovered that my EFIS conveniently displayed GPS ground speed right underneath where airspeed would normally be displayed, so I flew onto our destination, Uvalde, TX.
This is what the instruments looked like:
I found it interesting that the EFIS airspeed ribbon failed at the top of the airspeed range. This is opposite the steam gauge, which (or course) displayed zero when dead.
At Uvalde I got the tools out and removed the pitot tube from the aircraft (I love experimental planes) and tried to blow through it. Nothing, nada, zilch -- it was 100% clogged.
I took a piece of safety wire, and carefully reamed out a yellowish goo that looked like insect guts, or eggs, or something. Incredibly, in just 48 hours on that ramp in the desert, something had moved in and clogged that tube.
After reaming, here's what the instruments looked like on the next leg home:
100% normal.
Moral of the story: Use that pitot cover when you're parked outside for any length of time. You might get away without using one for a few decades, like me, but sooner or later bugs really will take up residence.