Never addressed in training.
Neither CP nor head mech have answer.
What is the purpose of this cruise checklist action? (ie what use the downside of leaving it on)View attachment 98361View attachment 98362
Based on @dmspilot ’s reply above, I’m guessing my guess was right. That once it feathers, you can’t get a restart. At least not using a windmilling prop turning the engine to do it. So what’s the logic behind FlightSafety’s teaching to do it anyway, despite the POH’s checklist instruction?FlightSafety teaches leave it on at all times…. That’s what we do in our 425.
Never addressed in training.
Neither CP nor head mech have answer.
What is the purpose of this cruise checklist action? (ie what use the downside of leaving it on)View attachment 98361View attachment 98362
When you’re in the cruise phase there is no need for anything to happen quickly, and no reason for an automated system to do any intervention. Let the pilot sort it out.
Having said that…. I leave it on in cruise.
It is a system that I REALLY hope works when I need it, and it is a mandatory preflight test every time before taking the runway. Vmc on the 425 without the prop feathered is north of 130kias. Those few seconds between Vr at 90 and 130 could be exciting if it doesn’t work. I’ve done it in the sim more than a few times, and can save it nearly every time…but I know it’s coming. IRL it would be spicy.
Worst case the circuit senses a false fail in cruise or a pilot bumps a power lever individually and the engine auto feathers and you rely on the over speed governor to do its job which is also a first flight of the day check.
It’s a pt-6 not a direct drive engine it is viscously coupled on a second spool between the prop and core. Prop motion is relatively negligible for the core to spool. I believe Cessna may have opted for shutting it off in cruise for the systems of the day. Perhaps hydraulic tq sensing failure modes, or the circuit related to it. Worst case the circuit senses a false fail in cruise or a pilot bumps a power lever individually and the engine auto feathers and you rely on the over speed governor to do its job which is also a first flight of the day check.
A engine out on a relatively large diameter prop, is amazing in the time to react vs a piston bird. Especially on something like a 425 which has a similar moment arm and rudder size to its piston cousin the 421. In cruise in the sim one an oei situation with auto feather inop it goes from cruise to vmc in seconds….