Sometimes airport geometry can play havoc with your best intentions. We had a NOAA C-130 setting in the run-up area with several 172s taxiing out. Because of the arrangement, the 130 prop wash was pointed right at the taxiway. Tower did real good and called the C-130 to say hey, keep the prop speed down. I think all of us students in the 172s were glad they were rentals and still cringing while watching the C-130... This was at BJC many years ago. About the only thing the C-130 said is that they had to sit there while they tried to fix their sat phone...Jet blast will ruin your day in a small airplane, in fact, prop wash from a large prop plane will mess you up too. Stay out of direct line with the business end of these AC.
Chances are that if the cowling was off those engines were not just at idleI would have thought 200+ feet is a gracious plenty.
No real exact numbers for me. The bigger the plane the further back I stay. If I'm the least bit concerned I will ask ground to inform the large jet that he has a little FLiB behind him. Especially now days with a lot of these guys taxiing around on one engine. The amount of thrust they have to use on the one to get going can be much higher. Helo's can be very problematic as well.We all learn about wingtip vortices but what about jet blast?
How much separation do you want when taxiing around the big boys when you are in a small general aviation aircraft?
We had a Cessna 150 flipped over by a C-130 at Wilmington a bunch of years back. This was even after the pilot coordinated with the pilot of the C-130 not to run up the engines until he had finished passing behind.
I was based at IAD and watched a 172 scooting sideways an taxiway Z (well it was probably W2, back then when the taxiways had sane nomenclature before some FAA yahoo redesignated them in the name of foolish consistency) when being blown by a Fedex DC-8 parked on the cargo ramp.
The question I had was that I was well aware of jet blast, but when a 767 is breathing down your neck on the taxiway, how much do those engines suck?
Here’s my small big iron plane’s danger zones
We all learn about wingtip vortices but what about jet blast?
How much separation do you want when taxiing around the big boys when you are in a small general aviation aircraft?
I’ve heard those Blackhawks throw off some nasty wake turbulence.View attachment 63080
You can actually use a heck of a lot less power hovering also. Little turbulent and smelly but 150-200 ft is a good sweet spot.
I’ve heard those Blackhawks throw off some nasty wake turbulence.
I’ve heard those Blackhawks throw off some nasty wake turbulence.