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Informal poll for the IR's: do you fly single piston in IMC?

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Do you fly Singe Engine's Into Hard IMC

  • Yes, frequently, sometimes (or often) with passengers.

    Votes: 89 35.9%
  • Yes, frequently, but never with passengers.

    Votes: 11 4.4%
  • Yes, but only in Turbine Powered Singles

    Votes: 6 2.4%
  • Occasionally, but I generally try to avoid it.

    Votes: 76 30.6%
  • Only if I absolutely have to.

    Votes: 35 14.1%
  • No frickin' way!

    Votes: 31 12.5%

  • Total voters
    248
Regarding engine failure in a single and in Avbugs defense, I had a momentary engine failure once right over the middle of the Chesapeake Bay in a Cherokee Six. My heart jumped up to my throat, every muscle in my body tensed at once and the first thought was I've got to get as close to the shore line as possible. (This was VFR) A immeadiate left turn and a quick stab (or three) at the "NRST" button on my trusty yoke mounted GPS, I switched tanks and the engine regained partial power. I made it to the airport and made a straight in without radio calls or anything. Why? well, I was afraid the engine was going to quit at any second, I didn't know the the name of the airport and I didn't know the unicom frequency (it turned out to be Melfa, VA Accomack County).
It turned out to be contaminated fuel in the outboard tanks. I was flying this plane on a ferry permit and failed to pay due diligence on my preflight. I added this to my "I learned about flying from this" category.
Yes, engine failure in a single is very scary indeed.
 
Single engine storys.... I was flying a Piper C-140 with a student (who was an A&P) when we started practicing a stall series. As soon as he brought the nose up the engine quit. The WX was clear. As the nose dropped the engine started and we agreed to land and look at the engine. After engine inspection and several run ups the engine always ran fine. So we took off to continue the lesson the next day. Again after aircraft nose up, the engine quit. Again after the nose dropped it started again. Back to the airport, check for water in the tank again (no water - fuel clear of crap) snake fuel lines in the wing and check for mud wasps, no problem found. Several run ups - no problems. I decided to not take off but do some quick nose ups below take off speed. As soon as I pulled nose up - the engine quit. The mechanic said lets take off and check the fuel pump. we opened the pump to find a small split in the diaphragm. Replaced with a new part and no problems.


It can be the smallest part that can make the engine quit.How lucky do you feel today......??????
 
I was going to say you had either a stuck or sunk float, but that would do it too. I've seen something similiar happen with intermittant operation then sudden failure with a damaged diaphram in the fuel flow divider of injected engines. The only evidence; minor fuel seepage from the drain line...something one probably wouldn't notice on a preflight.
 
...I've seen something similiar happen with intermittant operation then sudden failure with a damaged diaphram in the fuel flow divider of injected engines. The only evidence; minor fuel seepage from the drain line...something one probably wouldn't notice on a preflight.
That one sure brought back a few memories...
A long, long time ago in a galaxy far, far away I flew a Cessna 411 for a company in Las Vegas that used them to give air tours of the Grand Canyon. The company had just hung a factory remanufactued engine on it, in fact, it had just been returned to service and it was the first revenue flight. I had taken a full load of passengers to the Grand Canyon and was waiting around for the ground portion of their tour to finish up when our dispatcher called me on the phone to tell me that they wanted me to dead-head back to Las Vegas and pick up another group of passengers. Long story short, just after I had made my crosswind turn that engine did exactly what you mentioned - it suddenly just stopped. Period. It was a warm summer day at the Grand Canyon airport and the 411 wasn't known for its single-engine performance or manners.

I consider it one of those days when the angels were looking after me - the altitude that I had when the engine quit (400' to 500') was the altitude I had when I turned final. That airplane wasn't able to climb. To this day, I think that it would have been a very different outcome if those passengers that I had left behind would have been on board.

There was another interesting side to that experience. When the engine quit, I went through the engine out drill and feathered the engine then I turned back to the airport and entered downwind. I called the Grand Canyon tower and had no response. I tried two or three more times, again no response. I was getting a little miffed, when the tower controller called back and asked me to "say again". I told him that I had lost and engine and that I was declaring an emergency and returning to the airport. He told me that I was #3 emergency, following a Nevada Airlines DC-3 with an engine failure and a Scenic Airlines C-402 with an engine fire and to continue. (The Scenic 402 has the Allison turboprop conversion.) He had been on the phone talking with the center when I called. We were all basically converging on the airport at the same time. The Scenic 402 got to the airport first. I told the tower that if he couldn't clear the runway in time, I would offset and land on the parallel taxi-way. (The Grand Canyon airport just has the one runway and we occassionally used the taxiway when they did runway maintenance.) The 402 got down and cleared and I was able to land just as he cleared the runway. Just as I cleared the runway, the DC-3 came straight in, opposite direction, and landed.

Oh well, fortunately, days like that are hopefully just once in a career events.

LS
 
The 402 got down and cleared and I was able to land just as he cleared the runway. Just as I cleared the runway, the DC-3 came straight in, opposite direction, and landed.
Oh, yeah, sounds like the good ol' days,,,waaay back when we used to "go out and watch the planes come in"...there was a puurrdy good chanch ya might get to see a crash.:rolleyes:
 
I don't think there have been days for a very long while when merely watching at the airport means there was a good chance of seeing a crash...otherwise air crashes would be more common than car crashes, and that's just not the case.

South Rim is a special case, however. In former times, it represented one of the busiest runways in use at certain times, with no radar control. I arrived there often to find six traffic patterns in use, and full, VFR, for the same runway, and aircraft holding VFR in three different stacks. Inner and outer left and right downwinds at the same time, high and low, plus opposite direction traffic on approaches and multiple helicopter patterns in use...made it a busy place. All reporting coming and going were anouncements in the blind. It was probably some of the safest airspace, too, because everybody knew what they were supposed to be doing...and used see and avoid rather than hear and avoid.

There was a Navajo about 20 years ago out of South Rim that lost an engine. The pilot spent about 20 minutes struggling with it rather than getting back to land...and eventually shut down the wrong engine. Memory doesn't serve well, but I believe everyone was killed.
 
The "Good Ole days"? I think some of it was just luck of the draw. One guy at my company (who flew the same aircraft that I did) had a half a dozen in flight engine failures while I had several on the ground. And they were just strange. He had a fuel line burst at the connector in flight when I had a prop gear box fail at shut down. Ever see a PT-6 when then prop would not move, not 1/16 of an inch? He had a engine just over temp in flight while I had a accessory gear shear off on start up. At another company whenever I flew with one pilot we had a major failure of something. Several times the gear would not go down or up. Fuel cap failed in flight and started empting fuel out of the wing. Fire indication when there was no fire. Throttle stuck at cruise. Mx had replaced it and routed it around something it just jammed on. Went to the chief pilot to request we not fly together, after listing the failures he said OK. And we got along very well, we just did not think we should fly together....

So the thought of single engine IFR... I've done it but not something I look forward to....
 
A. Been there...done that got the T-shirt.

The older I get the more I realize the folly of my youth.

Gofish, is that a Navion in your avatar? The tail doesn't look like a North American.

For my two cents, when I fly my non-ice twin in winter, I like to have 1000' ceiling and low tops with some assurance I can get on top upon departure. Than I take what she gives and deal with it. XM is definitely a requisite safety item on board. In warm weather, I have flown my wife and daughter to mins, no sweat.
 
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