I don't know of any exact wording in "rules" about this but there is a good reason to include dead bodies. If there are 4 bodies in the plane and you say 3 souls on board you don't want them finding the other 3 and then saying "we found everyone" and quit looking. Relying on it being in the remarks may not save you when things are happening fast. I think the term "souls on board" is there for a good reason and it is meant to include souls on their way to wherever it is souls go.
I guess it's what they want for the flight plan. Most likely the bodies would be in bag or a box so I guess it wouldn't cause a problem. What's in the remarks tells the story and your covered for search and rescue operations because they'll know it before they even start the search.I understand what you are saying. I asked flight service several times while filing flight plans and they all said to not include dead bodies in the passenger count. I asked FSDO and our POI. All said not to include bodies.
I with ya, come up on a plane crash with one listed on board and find 5 bodies would really get everyone wondering what is going on..
I with ya, come up on a plane crash with one listed on board and find 5 bodies would really get everyone wondering what is going on..
Because I'm unfamiliar with the area, I went and looked at the map. From Travis to SJC would take you through the SFO B on an unknown route at unknown altitude (NORDO and no Mode C), and into the SJC with possibly no ability to turn your radio and transponder back on when you got there, and the possibility of an escalating situation on board. I'd assume that to allow that, ATC would have to clear out a whole block of airspace along your potential route, along with runways at SJC.
I'm naive to the ways of IFR, flying in congested airspace, and Bs and Cs, so I'm genuinely curious if ATC would accommodate such a request if they didn't consider it an emergency.
Well, we don't know what route he took, but if I was a controller, I'd assume direct considering he's dealing with complete electrical failure. But still seems like a pretty big accommodation, considering no Mode C and no radio for self reporting. And no idea what's going to happen next.The standard VFR route from the Travis area to SJC is via Concord (CCR) and then following I-680 down to San Jose. The route is all below the SFO Bravo, and can be flown without talking to ATC at all until you hit the SJC Charlie surface area. The only accommodation ATC made was okaying going into the Mode-C veil.
Interesting. I called for FF once from within the veil but under the outer shelf of B. I did not know that mode c wasn't working. Approach gave me flight following and then "suggested" headings that took me straight out from under the shelf.I had a transponder failure one time while flying the SF Bay Tour. Norcal let me finish my tour and return to Palo Alto through the SFO Bravo surface area without issue. They just had me report my altitude each time I switched controllers. They were able to track my primary target well enough that they gave me normal traffic advisories.
I wonder what controllers do when they have a primary-only return within the outer ring.
Well... In this particular case, you said the voltage regulator had tripped the alternator out of the circuit. Then you pulled the breaker for the alternator and it smoked. I'm not quite sure where the current was coming from to even go through that breaker if the alternator wasn't online. (e.g. Your alternator relay has dumped the field current.)
That's why I'm curious what the failure mode was.
This is a great thread in several ways -- but most striking (to me) is the number of people who have experienced charging system failures in airplanes.
Large inductive load could do that, perhaps an engaged starter motor.I'm surprised it took 75 posts to ask this question. How did the breaker "smoke" when PULLED?
SOME avionics folk take pride in a well done wiring harness, and it shows. But it's not the norm in older aircraft. We had one avionics shop yank an additional two POUNDS of crap from behind our panel
You know, because if all the radios work, who ever looks behind there?
Wiring resting on yoke tubes is one problem, wiring zip ties on the fuel line to the fuel flow gauge is another.This.
When our club's Arrow got a 430W and new transponder, the avionics tech shared with me a similar story. Several pounds of excess and unnecessary wiring were removed. In some places, six feet of wire had been used to make connections that were only a foot or so apart.
But the worst was that over the years, a lot of that wiring had come to rest on the yoke tubes, and the tubes had worn through the insulation in several places. There were little micro burn marks all over that wiring and all up and down the tubes. If you haven't looked lately, take a good look back there.
Ha! I had a voltage regulator malfunction and pop its circuit breaker in a puff of smoke too. This was in a Turbo 206. I was in a remote area of Wyoming (most areas in Wyoming are remote), and I flew to a nearby airport. The mechanic suggested that one option would be to go to a Ford dealer in town and buy an alternator. He said he would let me use his tools to install it, LOL. Instead, I called my boss and he had one overnighted from Casper.My alternator is a freaking Ford part you could buy at NAPA for $60 in today's dollars if it weren't for the FAA stamp on the case. Turned by a belt. I'm amazed the silly things last as long as they do.
People told you to go to CCR because you said you were at Travis. CCR is a VERY short flight from Travis, nowhere near as long as SJC.
Now it seems you were a bit further than that. But if you really flew direct from EDU to SJC, you flew right over CCR, and it was a lot more than 5-6 minutes difference.
From the alternator failure point I went to the Sunol pass and then to SJC. Did not fly over Concord. I just flight planned both routes. You're right, it wasn't 5-6 minutes difference, it was 8. Not really a big difference, and since I would have to deal with the Mode C veil and communications issues at both airports, Concord didn't really (and still doesn't) seem like a good option either way. If there were more going on than a failed alternator which meant I needed to get down right the heck now, then I would have landed at KDWA, which was pretty much right under me when the incident happened. Since that wasn't the case, no reason to go to Concord instead of San Jose.
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Well, the flaps are electric in my Cardinal, but the gear would not be a problem in case of electrical failure, since there is a (hydraulic) emergency extension mechanism that works really well. Its only weakness is that it IS hydraulic, and thus fails in case of a total hydraulic fluid leak. But it is definitely a workable option in case of electrical system failure.Reading stories like this always makes me glad for the Johnson bar gear and hydraulic flaps in my aircraft. In a complete electrical failure I can land normally minus all the yakking on the radio.
That said, good on the OP for keeping a cool head and landing safely.
Well, the flaps are electric in my Cardinal, but the gear would not be a problem in case of electrical failure, since there is a (hydraulic) emergency extension mechanism that works really well. Its only weakness is that it IS hydraulic, and thus fails in case of a total hydraulic fluid leak. But it is definitely a workable option in case of electrical system failure.
Flaps are optional anyway, but I would put in at least approach flaps early on if I had an alternator failure, so the landing would be fairly easy.
Yep, but approach flaps (10*) runs the motor for all of 2 seconds. Not a huge drain. And it slows me down so that I can more easily lower the gear without distracting maneuvers, and makes me more stable.Flaps are fairly likely to finish off your battery; they draw a lot of current. I'd pick a long runway and land without, or maybe extend them to max takeoff on final. No longer because they might not retract again in the event of a go-around. And extend gear with the hand pump if applicable. Electric motors and radio transmission are your big energy drains.
No argument there. To be honest I would probably have done what the OP did, due to get-there-itis, but the safest course would be to shut the master off immediately. No flaps, manual gear extension only. I was addressing the generic alternator failure case, not the OP's situation where there has been smoke.But in the situation given, where a CB has smoked, I'm not using electrical for anything. Master off, period. Land at nearest suitable airport. Use a handheld to declare an emergency if possible.