OOOOOOOOhhhhhhhh....Keep 10 on. I told him last time he taxied by that 8 was off. He didn’t seem to care…
I thought you said, "Nate has a screw loose"
not
"Your #8 screw is loose"
OOOOOOOOhhhhhhhh....Keep 10 on. I told him last time he taxied by that 8 was off. He didn’t seem to care…
My mechanic at home clued me into Lycoming SI 1560, which shows the assembly much better.
Surprised there’s no safety wire involved on the plug from the factory.
The only thing I'm wondering is why the anti-seize needs to be food grade...
Ha. No. The main difference is that food grade anti-seize is aluminum based and contains no copper/nickel/silver as other anti-seize. More a galvanic corrosion issue for certain installations.Henkel decided to run some version of anti-seize through all the compliance checks, FDA, FAA, etc., to simplify things and save money
Ha. No. The main difference is that food grade anti-seize is aluminum based and contains no copper/nickel/silver as other anti-seize. More a galvanic corrosion issue for certain installations.
FYI: the container usually states "Food Grade" and has to meet a certain spec which nickel-anti-seize does not.
Question: Does it stop constipation?
I don't know. Why not give it a try and report back. I've got a sheetload of it....Question: It helps with constipation?
His reward for his skill and performance is having him and his family safe and uninjured.It's a shame that it would have been financially better to have damaged the plane beyond repair during the forced landing that to have done such a good job and now have to pay for a new engine.
Well, probably not as it's about $40k underinsured in the current market.It's a shame that it would have been financially better to have damaged the plane beyond repair during the forced landing that to have done such a good job and now have to pay for a new engine.
So, like, do a Trevor Jacob?I tend to agree though that it does create a perverse incentive
If only I had heeded his lesson and brought 7 parachutes.So, like, do a Trevor Jacob?
Can’t believe the insurance companies have missed this opportunity- a add on rider, small fee - right in the middle of their business model.Well, probably not as it's about $40k underinsured in the current market.
I tend to agree though that it does create a perverse incentive, and that engine failure in flight should really be covered. Pro-rating it SMOH/TBO would be fair. As rare as in-flight engine failures are, I can't imagine it would add that much.
I don’t disagree, but here’s the problem. I don’t know what or if there is something downstream of the prop governor that maybe was getting zero. Probably nothing, but maybe something.I don't think the oil pressure drop is going to be an issue for a couple of reasons. 1. 10 psi indicates it was still moving oil thru the system giving you some lubricity between moving parts. 2. Anything affected first by lack of oil is a consumable part ie crank, rod, and cam bearings. Highly unlikely to have caused any bluing or removed the heat treating on the cam or crank journals.
This is all just my opinion and I'm sure to get ripped by someone here much smarter than me.....
It's a shame that it would have been financially better to have damaged the plane beyond repair during the forced landing that to have done such a good job and now have to pay for a new engine.
I tend to agree though that it does create a perverse incentive, and that engine failure in flight should really be covered. Pro-rating it SMOH/TBO would be fair. As rare as in-flight engine failures are, I can't imagine it would add that much. That would require a competitive insurance market though. If I was smart I would've ran over a taxi light after landing. The prop strike inspection would've been covered, and I couldn't see the damn things anyway.
I don’t disagree, but here’s the problem. I don’t know what or if there is something downstream of the prop governor that maybe was getting zero. Probably nothing, but maybe something.
Do you want me to accidentally pick all of the farmer's corn behind me this fall and send it to you to help?
It was washed at annual in October, but it didn't hardly leak a drop. Obviously it got a good oil bath like the rest of the plane. 850 SMOH in 2006. It was a beautiful engine that they obviously put a lot of time & effort into painting.How many hours were on that engine? To this novice, it looks almost new? Maybe because they cleaned it up?
Is 2qts enough or is that yet to be seen?
having synthetic vision like with a G3X or Skyview.
The critical engine is the engine without enough oil in it.That is what you call a critical engine...twin folks understand that the critical engine of a multi-engine fixed-wing aircraft is the engine that, in the event of failure, would most adversely affect the performance or handling abilities of an aircraft.
In a singe engine the critical engine is the only engine...
You know... that never even crossed my mind. I have syn vis available (I think) in garmin pilot. I've never really used it as I just didn't see much value in it. It would've made lining up to the RW so much easier. I need to start training with that feature.
Teresa was able to see it out her side window and get me lined up with the RW until we were low enough I could see the edge through my little corner.
No...I've tried to convince her to do a "pinch hitter" type course but she has zero interest.Is Teresa a pilot, too? Seems like a heck of a cool head to keep calm and guide you in when you can't see!