What would you want in icing conditions?
An escape plan...
Trapper John
What would I want in icing conditions?
a) A seat at the bar
b) A seat in back of a large turbine powered aircraft - if I just have to be somewhere
c) A seat behind the wheel of a nice four wheel drive with studded tires if b) is not available and most of the underequipped nutzo's are off the road
So I selected "other." As always, YMWV
Having used neither, my expert opinion is that boots are superior.
I would think that weeping wings would provide the best protection, but I havn't ever had ice on my airplane, so what do those say that have been in some good ice.
Boots are deice equipment. When ice forms, the boots can be inflated to make it go away.
Weepers are anti-ice equipment. If they are turned on prior to ice forming, they will prevent it from sticking to the airframe.
Weepers must therefore be activated prior to the time ice starts to form, which involves some guesswork by the pilot. If the ice forms before the weepers are activated, the system has insufficient pressure to dislodge it. The inescapable result is that weeper fluid is used for some period of time before and after the actual icing conditions are encountered, since some residual fluid will continue to weep after the pump is turned off and the system pressure equalizes.
If you check the hangar floor under a Citation S-II with weepers and a Citation II (booted) that landed at the same time during forecast icing conditions, you'll typically find an outline of deice-fluid of the leading edges of the wing and tail. It's slicker than owl****, so be very careful as you walk around the airplane.
My experience with TKS is limited and definitely doesn't involve any Citation time but it's my understanding that if you prime the system within an hour or so of an ice encounter, going to the high pressure mode will shed ice that's accumulated prior to activation.
What would you want in icing conditions?
An escape plan...
Trapper John
At the risk of repeating myself, and working off the top of my head, Appendix C to FAR 25 (which covers Part 23 airplanes by reference), says that in testing, the de-ice system has protected a wing in a stratus layer for 17 miles. Stay in the ice any greater distance and you are a test pilot. In convective conditions the distance shrinks to 3.8 miles. It also says that the maximum droplet size used in testing is 40 microns, which is hardly large enough to see.
A single malt scotch whiskey
I think this is true for all types of anti-ice/deice systems. A certain method may work better on one airplane than another. My personal choices based on the airplanes I've flown are:I'd suspect specifics of each installation would have a significant effect.
Wow - I'd never seen that before. What kind of ice accretion rate does that 3.8 mile distance translate to?
Trapper John
Bob,
Here's the paragraphs from Appendix C. Note that figures/charts referenced below stops at 40 microns for stratiform clouds and 50 microns for cumuliform clouds. 50 microns is about half the diameter of a human hair. So, there's no requirement per se to test the aircraft in conditions where the median volumetric diameter of the drop size exceeds 50 microns (or SLD size).
(a) Continuous maximum icing. The maximum continuous intensity of atmospheric icing conditions (continuous maximum icing) is defined by the variables of the cloud liquid water content, the mean effective diameter of the cloud droplets, the ambient air temperature, and the interrelationship of these three variables as shown in figure 1 of this appendix. The limiting icing envelope in terms of altitude and temperature is given in figure 2 of this appendix. The interrelationship of cloud liquid water content with drop diameter and altitude is determined from figures 1 and 2. The cloud liquid water content for continuous maximum icing conditions of a horizontal extent, other than 17.4 nautical miles, is determined by the value of liquid water content of figure 1, multiplied by the appropriate factor from figure 3 of this appendix.
(b) Intermittent maximum icing. The intermittent maximum intensity of atmospheric icing conditions (intermittent maximum icing) is defined by the variables of the cloud liquid water content, the mean effective diameter of the cloud droplets, the ambient air temperature, and the interrelationship of these three variables as shown in figure 4 of this appendix. The limiting icing envelope in terms of altitude and temperature is given in figure 5 of this appendix. The interrelationship of cloud liquid water content with drop diameter and altitude is determined from figures 4 and 5. The cloud liquid water content for intermittent maximum icing conditions of a horizontal extent, other than 2.6 nautical miles, is determined by the value of cloud liquid water content of figure 4 multiplied by the appropriate factor in figure 6 of this appendix.
Steve said:
...to be somewhere else.
Seriously, I want turbine engines with hot lips and hot wings. Anything less is, well, less.
I agree that hot wings are the best solution, but you don't necessarily need turbines to get it. The Douglas DC-6/7 actually had avgas-fired heaters that blew hot air through the leading edge of the wings/tail. It worked very well! (Interestingly, the heaters were the *exact* same type that were used for cabin heat!)
...to be somewhere else.
Seriously, I want turbine engines with hot lips and hot wings. Anything less is, well, less.
I tend to trust electrical things more than pneumatic things.
Funny, I have an inherent distrust of all things electrical.