FloridaPilot
Pattern Altitude
It looked like he checked everything out and the engine still quit on him. He is lucky he had a place to land because if he was in a populated area it would've been difficult!
Fly the airplane, not the checklist
- Fly twins instead?
- Bring a brown paper bag every time you fly for hyperventilation prevention
- Make sure you sump all the water out of the tanks...not just the first jar full
No one died, airplane wasn't totaled, no surprise at the lack of an NTSB report.But I looked for an NTSB report, and there's no record.
"What can we ALL learn from this Cessna 182 engine out"
All I got for now.
- Fly twins instead?
Engine sounded “off” not long after take off. Making power but it didn’t sound like full power.
Just a little more time to the crash site? Unless you fly a DA62
How much experience do you have flying more capable twins? I was speaking with a little tongue-in-cheek when I commented but I would have had about 450-500 fpm climb single engine already out of 1000 agl when he started losing power if I completely lost one. Having partial power loss on one as in his situation would have been a semi-routine return for landing resulting in taxiing to park vs calling an airplane retrieval service.
I still fly singles/don't expect everyone to have a mission or want to fly twins and think he did a good job to put it down and be able to walk away. The old wives tell about all twins but a DA62 only taking you to the crash site I'm guessing is also your version of tongue-in-cheek?
My eyes are still spinning.Don't use a hat mounted camera
They don't investigate unexplained engine failures that lead to emergency landings?
The criteria for a reportable accident don't include the circumstances you describe. No injury, not much property damage, no crew illness, no control system failure, etc.They don't investigate unexplained engine failures that lead to emergency landings?
How much experience do you have flying more capable twins? I was speaking with a little tongue-in-cheek when I commented but I would have had about 450-500 fpm climb single engine already out of 1000 agl when he started losing power if I completely lost one. Having partial power loss on one as in his situation would have been a semi-routine return for landing resulting in taxiing to park vs calling an airplane retrieval service.
I still fly singles/don't expect everyone to have a mission or want to fly twins and think he did a good job to put it down and be able to walk away. The old wives tell about all twins but a DA62 only taking you to the crash site I'm guessing is also your version of tongue-in-cheek?
Disclaimer: I have no evidence to back this up, I just recall reading/hearing this somewhere.#4. Go pretty much as fast, (Compared to a single)
He is a POA member but I forget which one.
He commented on out last time someone posted it.
This has come up before and is in one of the message areas with the pilot commenting on it here or red board. Was in south Texas, pilot was relatively new.
Incident addressed on here a while ago. It was @funkster9. @Funkeruski I believe is related to him, also on here. Lifter failures led to partial power. He did well enough.
maybe running up to static RPM before releasing the brakes... Might have failed on the runway rather than after rotation or maybe showed some sickness by not reaching expected static RPMs... Other than that, I think, yea $hyt happens.is there anything that would have showed up in a pre-flight/engine run-up/scan of gauges prior to departure
Something feels hinky about this video, but not sure why. Maybe because it's posted by a professional YouTuber. But I looked for an NTSB report, and there's no record. That doesn't necessarily mean anything, but the uploaded said the FAA was investigating the cause, so I figured there'd be something.
Anyhow, he walked away and the plane seemed undamaged, so that's all good. Hard to read the instruments on my phone (especially with that giant thing on the yoke), but it appears the engine was making power and he was at least maintaining altitude up to the point he decided to put it down, so he may have been able to turn around our land on the crossing runway.
Would like to know what the flaps were set at, whether he sumped, etc.
You need AIDS to find it:
http://www.asias.faa.gov/pls/apex/f?p=100:18:0::NO::AP_BRIEF_RPT_VAR:20121023025089I
Not to drag out a discussion that's already been had at some point in the past but is there anything that would have showed up in a pre-flight/engine run-up/scan of gauges prior to departure?.. Or is this one of those 'poop happens' sort of things that everyone talks about and not-so-secretly hopes to never experience?
Maybe. Depends. We don’t know the cause of the failure in this one, so ... hard to say. Some pending failures might show up on an engine monitor if equipped. Etc. etc. etc.
I think engine outs and mid air collisions have two things in common. The amount we stress over them is not in proportion to the likelihood of them actually occurring.
It's when a lifter won't open an intake or exhaust valve. If the valve can't open properly, then depending on whether it's an intake or exhaust valve, the engine either can't bring in enough air through the offending valve or expel enough exhaust. Either way, it does a number on your power, as the gentleman in the video experienced.What’s a “collapsed lifter”?
Ah, gotcha. Thanks! Having seen the video I think I woulda pulled the power earlier and taken that field to the right of the airport. Easy to say from here.It's when a lifter won't open an intake or exhaust valve. If the valve can't open properly, then depending on whether it's an intake or exhaust valve, the engine either can't bring in enough air through the offending valve or expel enough exhaust. Either way, it does a number on your power, as the gentleman in the video experienced.
Here’s a cross section of a lifter.What’s a “collapsed lifter”?