EdFred
Taxi to Parking
First year Comanche.Sounds like an older Cherokee 6. I'd have to find my old checklist, but I think draining each tank for a minute, move fuel selector, drain again, was the key to the 6.
First year Comanche.Sounds like an older Cherokee 6. I'd have to find my old checklist, but I think draining each tank for a minute, move fuel selector, drain again, was the key to the 6.
100LL becomes hazardous waste when not burned in an engine or contained in a fuel tank. The lead additive is corrosive to ramp surfaces and carcinogenic to humans.Which is worse, having the fuel evaporate into the atmosphere, or burning it and having it go into the atmosphere?
In winter in the Midwest growing up, we'd always have a bottle or two of HEET when the car started running poorly. Winters were often full of wet snow. What is this mystery thing called HEET? 99% MethanolThen again, winter in Alaska we never sumped. Why.?? Because ice may get stuck in the sump when it is open, and drain the fuel out.
What did we do.??
We added isopropyl alcohol into the fuel while fueling up.
long chain HCs and that wonderful tetraethyl-lead or H2O, CO2, CO, various NOx, PBOx and fewer long chain HCs....hmmm.Which is worse, having the fuel evaporate into the atmosphere, or burning it and having it go into the atmosphere?
A question to keep the greenies busy.Which is worse, having the fuel evaporate into the atmosphere, or burning it and having it go into the atmosphere?
I have done that when nothing else was available.I fling it, so most evaporates before it hits the ground.
The lead is not the problem with ramp surfaces. Unleaded fuels have the same issues.The lead additive is corrosive to ramp surfaces and carcinogenic to humans.
burning it through an engine won't put it right into the ground water system.Which is worse, having the fuel evaporate into the atmosphere, or burning it and having it go into the atmosphere?
He's an idiot and is a poor reflection of competent flight instruction. And then we wonder why people take off with sediment in tanks, control locks in place, etc. What a disgrace!Howdy y'all,
Did all of my training out of Ohio. I was trained to and have always properly sumped the aircraft before every flight. Even with weeks of no rain, I've caught water out of the tanks right after fueling - pretty sure it came from the fuel truck.
I recently moved out west to a really dry area, and went up with an instructor for a flight review/rental checkout. I have almost 300 hours and am working on commercial now.
When we get out to the aircraft (172), the instructor was eager to show me his no-checklist preflight "flow," which already rubbed me the wrong way. I understand having a flow can be valuable, but not using a checklist (even just to check things off after the "flow") as an instructor for a first flight, from a rental company/flight school, seems bizarre. At the end of his preflight demonstration, I noticed he hadn't bothered to sump anything. When I asked about it, he looked around and pointed out how dry it was, but said that I could if I wanted to (I did).
Just wanted to gather opinions on preflight flows vs. checklists as well as fuel sumping practices.
been a while since I quoted a post of yours! Our club Comanche is the same. To me, it's worth the hassle. I'm less worried about water, and more about other "crud" that could get jammed up in the fuel system somewhere. I agree the sumping is a hassle, and it is also problematic on the Aztec and twinkie. But I still sump.I'm not gonna lie. I don't sump. I haven't sumped in 14+ years. Why? Because the only place to sump the fuel requires sliding under the plane on my back, opening up a hatch on the belly, and then getting to the sump.
I'd wager most people in a low wing don't sump at the most important point, which in many cases is going to be in a location like you described. Sumping at the tanks isn't going to catch everything.I'm not gonna lie. I don't sump. I haven't sumped in 14+ years. Why? Because the only place to sump the fuel requires sliding under the plane on my back, opening up a hatch on the belly, and then getting to the sump.
I'd wager most people in a low wing don't sump at the most important point, which in many cases is going to be in a location like you described. Sumping at the tanks isn't going to catch everything.
The Cherokee had an easy to reach low point. I sumped every time.I'd wager most people in a low wing don't sump at the most important point, which in many cases is going to be in a location like you described. Sumping at the tanks isn't going to catch everything.
Ed:The Cherokee had an easy to reach low point. I sumped every time.
Same.Ed:
Lost one friend to an un-sumped Comanche; rather never lose another.
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