Tantalum
Final Approach
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- Feb 22, 2017
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San_Diego_Pilot
I get the impression he's alienated everyonesomebody close to that man
I get the impression he's alienated everyonesomebody close to that man
I keep hoping somebody close to that man will intervene before something really bad happens.
Yep. I listened, too. He sounded like he was pumped full of adrenaline and not thinking very clearly.FWIW, he sounded pretty frantic - more so than during the previous emergency
I keep hoping somebody close to that man will intervene before something really bad happens.
He is definitely underscoring the general fear pilots have for declaring an emergency.
Like someone with a wayward aircraft tug that could "accidentally" demolish the thing? Lol.
He might also be concerned that the FAA might come and have a closer look at his project. I guess that there is a limit of how far they let one go with 'experimenting'. They probably still want to see certain engineering practices and some degree of reasoning to be applied.
Yeah, if you feel the need to say, "I may declare an emergency in the next 30 seconds," it's probably already time to declare one. Not like it costs anything, and only helps.He is definitely underscoring the general fear pilots have for declaring an emergency.
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FWIW, he sounded pretty frantic - more so than during the previous emergency - but IMHO he deserves some kudos for making the choice to get it on the ground when he did.
Kudos for making the only rational choice? He showed more of his seriously defective decision making by first requesting 17, then accepting 35, and finally realizing the obvious, landing on 17.
"Some" kudos, in that it was the best decision he's made in quite some time... and even then, as we've both noted, he almost f****d it up (but didn't.)
Why on earth do you begin a flight with less than required oil in the first place?
thats great, he followed his procedure, but the first thing on his procedure for any oil related issue should be land ASAP!
Sounds like you'd have a clue what to look at in a used engine. I doubt peter has that knowledge. He had an engine failure. I'm replacing every line and thoroughly flushing every cooler. Not to mention finding the cause of the original failure. Peter did none of that. Instead just plugged the lines with paper towels and said "i'm good with that"Just a little musing here. I have no idea what precipitated the emergency. One could possibly be forgiven for thinking it might have been another engine problem. If it was....
I have no problem with trying to do an automotive conversion, honestly. It's an experimental design; he's experimenting. Maybe he'll find that there is no good solution, maybe he'll find a good solution. There are some successful auto conversions out there, after all. Maybe they're not common, but they do exist.
That said... personally, if I'm sourcing used auto engines for an airplane, the auto engine would be the starting point. Find a suitable engine, tear it down, inspect it, do whatever modifications might be needed, re-assemble, test run, and fly. But those two steps -- tear it down and inspect it -- really shouldn't be skipped. No matter how low the mileage or how benign you might think the reasons may be for an engine to be pulled from a car, you really are buying a complete unknown. How do you tell the difference between an engine that's in perfect internal condition, and one that has suffered hidden damage in a collision (or whatever) and is about to shred itself? Without a teardown and inspection, you really can't. I wouldn't even put a salvage yard engine in a car without a teardown and inspection, to be honest.
I'm going to speculate he didn't, but just saying he did cuz that sounds better?I could only speculate...
Or the comment a few videos ago on the turbos needing proper sizing. Response "not going to happen on this bird so may as well stop asking". At this point it's more like begging.From YT comments on the high speed taxi video. He sounds a little testy.
"Just so you guys all don't wet your pants... I had a low oil light that was because I had slightly less oil in the sump than what is required. I followed my procedure to reduce throttle, flatten the prop and then restore throttle. The low oil light went off and everything else was normal. Tower asked me to continue the left base approach to 17 so I went ahead and did so. You guys never learn about speculating. It just amazes me."
This just amazes me, too, though likely for profoundly different reasons than his.
W&BWhy on earth do you begin a flight with less than required oil in the first place?
Actually, less oil means it goes through the cooler more often and will cool it better solving his heat problems........
Actually, less oil means it goes through the cooler more often and will cool it better solving his heat problems........
Yeah, this. And a smaller mass of oil overall would make the system get hotter faster with the same amount of heat input. It would also cool off faster after the flight, but that is not his issue.This isn't how heat exchange works. The oil is absorbing heat from a 500 lb mass, then giving that heat back to the atmosphere through the oil cooler. As long as the cooler is full and oil is moving through it at the same rate, there won't be any difference in the amount of heat exchanged, and the difference a quart or two of oil makes in the system's total mass is insignificant.
That sounds like a Peter solution to me.Actually, less oil means it goes through the cooler more often and will cool it better solving his heat problems........
I thought it sounded like really good satire.That sounds like a Peter solution to me.
thank you, somebody got it!I thought it sounded like really good satire.
Why on earth do you begin a flight with less than required oil in the first place?
Still looking for that elusive 4K thermoclineClimbed pretty steadily to 3800