MAKG1
Touchdown! Greaser!
- Joined
- Jun 19, 2012
- Messages
- 13,411
- Location
- California central coast
- Display Name
Display name:
MAKG
I flew an IFR cross country up to Napa today for a $300 burger. The aircraft was an Archer equipped with 650 and Sandel HSI. Autopilot is Piper original and inop. Weather was 5000 overcast at Reid and 1500 overcast at Napa, with light rain. Outbound was uneventful except Center dumped me on the ILS too close and too high after telling me to expect the VOR. Needed a lot of descent, but it was fine.
On the return, the wind picked up. I was tracking nearly 20 deg WCAs and had occasional smooth but fairly strong up and down drafts. Once, I needed full power to maintain altitude (but at 100 knots rather than Vy, so I did have some margin). That had me looking for ice, but there was no trace at all and the OAT was 8 C, and carb heat dropped 100 RPM and never increased (so no carb ice either).
All these are great exercise. I've been flying a fair amount of actual lately, and a little light turbulence and some winds are just perfect.
Then, over Marin, in the clouds at 5000, the HSI alerted "Gyro" and started jumping 20 deg intermittently. Vacuum is fine and the AI cross checks just fine. I figure out that the GPS is set for heading up (what kind of MORON came up with that?), but decide I don't want to fixate on GPS settings given workload, and I'll ignore it shifting discontinuously with the heading jumps. The turbulence makes the mag compass very difficult to use, as it won't hold still. The HSI can't be ignored entirely because it has the CDI. It's changing instantaneously 20 deg occasionally, and is no longer flagging the gyro (!). Distracting as hell, and it's a LOT harder to ignore the wrong heading information than it should be. NorCal complains about my heading and I tell them I'm flying the mag compass due to a DG failure. Eventually, I figure out the best way to hold a heading is to hold a track and use the desired and actual tracks off the GPS. Then, I ask NorCal for courses rather than headings. They take a while, but eventually give me direct OSI VOR. Good enough. I notify NorCal at each handoff that the DG has failed.
Now for options. SFO and all the Peninsula airports are reporting 1500 overcast. I don't think shooting an approach like this is a very good idea. I can hold altitude pretty well despite the occasional turbulence, but heading is not good enough. San Jose and Reid both report overcast 5000. Good. So the best option is to exit the clouds from the side into VMC. NorCal gives me a descent to 4000. A few minutes after level off, I break out. Then I get 3000, fly direct Reid, report in sight. Visibility is 30+ miles under the deck, no problem. Cleared for the visual, and landing is uneventful.
Lessons?
1. Check the GPS settings before takeoff.
2. Get some partial panel practice with foggles in turbulence, or at least with an instructor. It is NOT the same -- actually, not even close -- but I should have a strategy for dealing with this failure, rather than working this out on the fly.
3. Don't fly that damn Archer in IMC, or at night. It has done this before.
4. Consider a separate DG and CDI so I can put a sticky on the DG. Maybe use the GPS default nav page for this.
On the return, the wind picked up. I was tracking nearly 20 deg WCAs and had occasional smooth but fairly strong up and down drafts. Once, I needed full power to maintain altitude (but at 100 knots rather than Vy, so I did have some margin). That had me looking for ice, but there was no trace at all and the OAT was 8 C, and carb heat dropped 100 RPM and never increased (so no carb ice either).
All these are great exercise. I've been flying a fair amount of actual lately, and a little light turbulence and some winds are just perfect.
Then, over Marin, in the clouds at 5000, the HSI alerted "Gyro" and started jumping 20 deg intermittently. Vacuum is fine and the AI cross checks just fine. I figure out that the GPS is set for heading up (what kind of MORON came up with that?), but decide I don't want to fixate on GPS settings given workload, and I'll ignore it shifting discontinuously with the heading jumps. The turbulence makes the mag compass very difficult to use, as it won't hold still. The HSI can't be ignored entirely because it has the CDI. It's changing instantaneously 20 deg occasionally, and is no longer flagging the gyro (!). Distracting as hell, and it's a LOT harder to ignore the wrong heading information than it should be. NorCal complains about my heading and I tell them I'm flying the mag compass due to a DG failure. Eventually, I figure out the best way to hold a heading is to hold a track and use the desired and actual tracks off the GPS. Then, I ask NorCal for courses rather than headings. They take a while, but eventually give me direct OSI VOR. Good enough. I notify NorCal at each handoff that the DG has failed.
Now for options. SFO and all the Peninsula airports are reporting 1500 overcast. I don't think shooting an approach like this is a very good idea. I can hold altitude pretty well despite the occasional turbulence, but heading is not good enough. San Jose and Reid both report overcast 5000. Good. So the best option is to exit the clouds from the side into VMC. NorCal gives me a descent to 4000. A few minutes after level off, I break out. Then I get 3000, fly direct Reid, report in sight. Visibility is 30+ miles under the deck, no problem. Cleared for the visual, and landing is uneventful.
Lessons?
1. Check the GPS settings before takeoff.
2. Get some partial panel practice with foggles in turbulence, or at least with an instructor. It is NOT the same -- actually, not even close -- but I should have a strategy for dealing with this failure, rather than working this out on the fly.
3. Don't fly that damn Archer in IMC, or at night. It has done this before.
4. Consider a separate DG and CDI so I can put a sticky on the DG. Maybe use the GPS default nav page for this.