timeless
Well-known member
- Joined
- Oct 10, 2005
- Posts
- 114
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To answer your question, yes it can cause problems, depending on the circumstances...ask the other pilot why he does it that way. I'd be curious to know.
His theory is that an unfeathered prop is easier for an engine to turn during start and that the engine starts cooler that way.
This is correct...for the 1904 A90, although I'm not sure they had static inverters until the 1906 models came outMy understanding for the reason to start the King Air with the props forward is an electrical issue.
The oil pressure gauges in the King Air are AC powered. The static inverter is not brought on line until after both engines are started. Starting with the props forward will give you an indication of engine oil pressure, as the props move from feather to flat pitch.
FYI: The King Air info above is for the 1904 A90 I have flown. Your mileage may vary.
Regardless of propeller lever position, the propellers WILL go to feather upon shutdown, as they are spring-driven that direction, and the loss of oil pressure will allow the springs to do their things.This of course assumes the engine was shut down in feather, which is what is called for on the checklist.
Not to hijack the thread, but there are a LOT of things in the POH that aren't in the checklist...f'rinstance...in Hawkers, the book tells you not to hold the nose off the ground for aerodynamic braking, lest you screw up the main gear something awful (and trust me...the shaking IS awful). Never heard it at school, and it's not in the checklist, but it IS in the book.Some of the guys you fly with want to read the POH in flight, and find "wow, I didn't know that" stuff buried in there. I am not in that crowd however. ...
The factory wrote the checklist....I stopped trying to be smarter than them a long time ago!
Not to hijack the thread, but there are a LOT of things in the POH that aren't in the checklist...f'rinstance...in Hawkers, the book tells you not to hold the nose off the ground for aerodynamic braking, lest you screw up the main gear something awful (and trust me...the shaking IS awful). Never heard it at school, and it's not in the checklist, but it IS in the book.
A couple of our guys were trying to troubleshoot an engine indication for a long time...DoM came up with a form to fill out that was largely engine parameters. I found out about this when I got in that particular airplane, having not been in it for over a year. Had the engine issue at cruise, pulled out the form, and thought "why am I filling this out? I just push this little button here, and the engine computer takes a picture of all this stuff for a fair amount of time on either side." Not in the checklist, as the computers were a mod and the checklist was never changed to reflect the fact that the vast majority of the airframes HAVE been modded...but it's in the AFM supplement. Care to guess how many people in the company HAD read that supplement?
Long story short, I strongly recommend reading ALL of your aircraft's manuals and supplements...whether you do it at cruise or on your own time is your business. I like to do it on company time
Fly safe!
David