azpilot
Line Up and Wait
- Joined
- Jul 27, 2015
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azpilot
I have been engaging in one of my favorites hobbies today, which is pursuing the NTSB accident database and reading reports. (by the way, I am very fun at parties)
This particular crash caught my attention.
https://data.ntsb.gov/Docket?ProjectID=100307
I am very happy to report that all four occupants walked away, and were not injured. The following wording is taken directly from the NTSB report.
"Examination of the engine and accessories revealed that the left magneto fired on only 3 of its 6 terminals. The airplane was equipped an electronic ignition system that was coupled to the magnetos. The system created multiple sparks over a longer duration and synchronized timing between the two magnetos. This synchronization was accomplished by using the left magneto as a trigger for the complete system. When the electronic ignition was operating, it relied solely on the left magneto points to fire both magnetos with an enhanced multi-spark. If the left magneto failed or deteriorated, then the complete ignition cycle would be compromised. The degraded functionality of the left magneto was likely the cause of the partial engine power loss."
Here's the question. Wouldn't a mag check prior to takeoff show that something was wrong here? If I understand this correctly, the right magnetos were running based on the left magnetos. So if you shut the left mags off, the engine should not be able to run. I must be missing something...
The NTSB didn't say anything about the runup before takeoff. The root cause was determined to be partial loss of engine power due to faulty wiring.
This particular crash caught my attention.
https://data.ntsb.gov/Docket?ProjectID=100307
I am very happy to report that all four occupants walked away, and were not injured. The following wording is taken directly from the NTSB report.
"Examination of the engine and accessories revealed that the left magneto fired on only 3 of its 6 terminals. The airplane was equipped an electronic ignition system that was coupled to the magnetos. The system created multiple sparks over a longer duration and synchronized timing between the two magnetos. This synchronization was accomplished by using the left magneto as a trigger for the complete system. When the electronic ignition was operating, it relied solely on the left magneto points to fire both magnetos with an enhanced multi-spark. If the left magneto failed or deteriorated, then the complete ignition cycle would be compromised. The degraded functionality of the left magneto was likely the cause of the partial engine power loss."
Here's the question. Wouldn't a mag check prior to takeoff show that something was wrong here? If I understand this correctly, the right magnetos were running based on the left magnetos. So if you shut the left mags off, the engine should not be able to run. I must be missing something...
The NTSB didn't say anything about the runup before takeoff. The root cause was determined to be partial loss of engine power due to faulty wiring.