There we (my son Lane and I) were Tuesday morning cruising fat, dumb and happy in my C414 at FL210 returning home to Atlanta from Burnet, TX where we had spent a day of recurrent sim training. That was a day of constant engine and other failures. It was his leg to fly back and things were good with smooth conditions, smooth running engines, 31gph total fuel flow, TAS at 202kts and ground speed around 235. Looking good for non-stop 750 nm flight. An hour or so into the flight we experienced a power loss. I looked up at the gauges. Manifold pressure on the right engine was 10" (We cruise at 31")! Everything else looked good, oil pressure, rpm, etc. We switched fuel tanks, no change, mags, no change, boost pump in high, low and off gave no change, moving the throttle seemed to change things a little, but might have been our imagination. After a minute or two maximum we decided to shut down and feather the engine. As pilot monitoring I called Houston Center and advised of our problem. We had to descend because we couldn't hold altitude on one engine nor could we hold cabin altitude below 10,000' on one.
Houston advised that Alexandria (LA) - KAEX- was close for a diversion if we wanted. I said standby and looked at the chart for our options. I checked ForeFlight and saw they did have a maintenance facility, so I told Houston we wanted to divert there and I declared an emergency. We got a vector and clearance to 11,000'. I checked the ATIS, and airport was VFR but we had a cloud layer to descend through. We made the decision to ask for the RNAV14 approach (the day before we'd done MANY single engine approaches. (The irony of all this is still quite amazing to me.) At some point Houston switched me over to Polk Approach. Both Houston Center and Polk Approach controllers did an excellent job of handling us. There was obviously a lot of landline talk going on because of us. We were high, but the approach has a hold at the IAF so we asked for and were cleared to descend in the hold and then were cleared for the approach. Lane elected to use the STEC3100 autopilot to do the flying, and it did a perfect job.
We broke through the layer, had the runway in sight, Lane switched off the A/P, flew a single engine approach (15 deg flaps, 120kts, gear down once the runway was definitely made, etc) and touched down perfectly. I had told one of the controllers we might have trouble taxiing on one engine, and it might be good to have a tug available if possible. We easily were able to make the turn off the runway at the first exit and did so. There was a fire truck waiting there, and another on the next exit, and another even further up. We were also met with various other trucks and pickups all with flashing lights on their tops and the requested tug. Actually we were able to taxi to the very nice Millionair FBO ramp without assistance.
Somebody from the fire department met us to get some information for their records and that was it. Clearly I'm facing an expensive maintenance problem and the plane is still 500 miles from home. More on that in another post.
View attachment 114774
Houston advised that Alexandria (LA) - KAEX- was close for a diversion if we wanted. I said standby and looked at the chart for our options. I checked ForeFlight and saw they did have a maintenance facility, so I told Houston we wanted to divert there and I declared an emergency. We got a vector and clearance to 11,000'. I checked the ATIS, and airport was VFR but we had a cloud layer to descend through. We made the decision to ask for the RNAV14 approach (the day before we'd done MANY single engine approaches. (The irony of all this is still quite amazing to me.) At some point Houston switched me over to Polk Approach. Both Houston Center and Polk Approach controllers did an excellent job of handling us. There was obviously a lot of landline talk going on because of us. We were high, but the approach has a hold at the IAF so we asked for and were cleared to descend in the hold and then were cleared for the approach. Lane elected to use the STEC3100 autopilot to do the flying, and it did a perfect job.
We broke through the layer, had the runway in sight, Lane switched off the A/P, flew a single engine approach (15 deg flaps, 120kts, gear down once the runway was definitely made, etc) and touched down perfectly. I had told one of the controllers we might have trouble taxiing on one engine, and it might be good to have a tug available if possible. We easily were able to make the turn off the runway at the first exit and did so. There was a fire truck waiting there, and another on the next exit, and another even further up. We were also met with various other trucks and pickups all with flashing lights on their tops and the requested tug. Actually we were able to taxi to the very nice Millionair FBO ramp without assistance.
Somebody from the fire department met us to get some information for their records and that was it. Clearly I'm facing an expensive maintenance problem and the plane is still 500 miles from home. More on that in another post.
View attachment 114774
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