rachelk.tailwinds
Pre-takeoff checklist
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- Nov 23, 2014
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Rachel
Since this is my first post, I figured it might as well be a vulnerable one!
I have ASEL and a high-performance endorsement with about 100 hours.
I'm part owner of a 1962 182.
We had a new audio control panel installed and a fresh annual directly before this trip.
I was leaving on vacation from KFTG (Denver) to KLBL (Liberal, KS) when I heard something like a backfire and loss of power on takeoff. My boyfriend, Austin, who is a gear head by every definition but who is not a pilot seemed worried but trusted my decision to continue the takeoff. I made this decision after quickly thinking back to my primary flight training days and a moment which I vividly remember my CFI saying, "don't worry about backfires, these engines just do that sometimes." The 2 1/2 hour flight to LBL was perfect, the new radios work great, there were no problems with the navigation or the engine gauges or anything. We had a mechanic at the FBO, Steve Lyddon (great guy, highly recommend him and his FBO), check out the engine, after which he said it was a very strong engine and doubted it ever backfiring.
The next day, we left for KFOE (Topeka, KS). Again, everything was absolutely perfect. Along the way, Austin commented that the ammeter was showing a discharge I sloughed it off for God knows what reason. This was a 3 hour leg and about 10 minutes out from the airport, just as soon as I had the field in sigh: dead silence. I wasn't hearing ATC anymore and they certainly were not hearing me. I had a handheld radio on board and though it's old, a little weak, and tough to hear over the engine, after squawking 7600, I could hear them repeat a few times to me that I was cleared to land.
Upon landing, we started racking our brains trying to figure out what went wrong. Was it the new audio control panel? Probably. Was it the generator? Could have been. Voltage regulator? Maybe.
While grounded in Topeka, my mechanic (also conveniently my dad) and I tried remotely troubleshooting the problem without finding much of a solution. We took the battery to a nearby auto parts store and were able to rule out that possibility since it easily took and held a charge.
After a few days of running around like a chicken with its head cut off, I determined that the airplane was safe to fly, but that we would have to leave the radios off for as much of the flight as possible to conserve battery. After leaving the FOE airspace, I turned off the radios and headed right down I-70 all the way home to FTG. Sometime after reaching our cruise altitued, I flipped off the landing lights and thought to myself, hmm... I think I forgot that part on the first two legs.
A week later, after having the generator, voltage regulator, battery, and audio control panel tested and running through every step I made, alas, we found that I ran that whopping 15 amp landing light the whole two legs and sucked the battery clean dry, which is why the airplane started load shedding the radios 2 hours and 50 minutes into the flight from LBL.
And the backfire? Well, let's just say I learned a little something about carbureted engines, too.
I have ASEL and a high-performance endorsement with about 100 hours.
I'm part owner of a 1962 182.
We had a new audio control panel installed and a fresh annual directly before this trip.
I was leaving on vacation from KFTG (Denver) to KLBL (Liberal, KS) when I heard something like a backfire and loss of power on takeoff. My boyfriend, Austin, who is a gear head by every definition but who is not a pilot seemed worried but trusted my decision to continue the takeoff. I made this decision after quickly thinking back to my primary flight training days and a moment which I vividly remember my CFI saying, "don't worry about backfires, these engines just do that sometimes." The 2 1/2 hour flight to LBL was perfect, the new radios work great, there were no problems with the navigation or the engine gauges or anything. We had a mechanic at the FBO, Steve Lyddon (great guy, highly recommend him and his FBO), check out the engine, after which he said it was a very strong engine and doubted it ever backfiring.
The next day, we left for KFOE (Topeka, KS). Again, everything was absolutely perfect. Along the way, Austin commented that the ammeter was showing a discharge I sloughed it off for God knows what reason. This was a 3 hour leg and about 10 minutes out from the airport, just as soon as I had the field in sigh: dead silence. I wasn't hearing ATC anymore and they certainly were not hearing me. I had a handheld radio on board and though it's old, a little weak, and tough to hear over the engine, after squawking 7600, I could hear them repeat a few times to me that I was cleared to land.
Upon landing, we started racking our brains trying to figure out what went wrong. Was it the new audio control panel? Probably. Was it the generator? Could have been. Voltage regulator? Maybe.
While grounded in Topeka, my mechanic (also conveniently my dad) and I tried remotely troubleshooting the problem without finding much of a solution. We took the battery to a nearby auto parts store and were able to rule out that possibility since it easily took and held a charge.
After a few days of running around like a chicken with its head cut off, I determined that the airplane was safe to fly, but that we would have to leave the radios off for as much of the flight as possible to conserve battery. After leaving the FOE airspace, I turned off the radios and headed right down I-70 all the way home to FTG. Sometime after reaching our cruise altitued, I flipped off the landing lights and thought to myself, hmm... I think I forgot that part on the first two legs.
A week later, after having the generator, voltage regulator, battery, and audio control panel tested and running through every step I made, alas, we found that I ran that whopping 15 amp landing light the whole two legs and sucked the battery clean dry, which is why the airplane started load shedding the radios 2 hours and 50 minutes into the flight from LBL.
And the backfire? Well, let's just say I learned a little something about carbureted engines, too.
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