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Sorry, posting on a message board about correct technique is not grounds for a "Form-5".WTF - shutdown both engines just prior to touchdown - PLEEEZE
Go back to the GA board - to say that shutting down both engines in the flare with 74 passengers on board because of an Unsafe gear indication is "proper technique" needs a Form-5 checkride NOW!
Wait, I thought it was a hydraulic airplane? Can't you guys make up your mind? Show me where the battery doesn't connect to the electrical system. It will, and that will give you electrical power when you shut down engines.First - a DHC-8 400 is an Electric airplane - YOU CANT JUST SHUT the engines down and work everything else - BAD THINGS HAPPEN in electric airplanes when you suddenly turn off all the 28volt juice.
Wel, you can't get enough of that.Off the top of my head - Fire Detection
It's not down (gear), you won't need them. Ground friction.- Anti-Skid Braking system - Normal brakes
This can only hurt you by increasing drag and putting pressure on the gear during roll out. You want to apply the weight witha smooth technique.- Ground Spoiler activation
You have emergency lights.- Cabin lighting
You don't have ailerons? If I am rolling out with a gear that is not secure, I do not want any additional drag on the wing as I am trying to keep it off the runway until the last minute!- Roll Spoiler (so much for all the cross-wind correction you had).
You will not need this in the emergency landing phase. You will be skidding. If the gear holds, use aerodynamic and emergency braking.Not to mention you just took away the best way to slow down a turbo-prop - reverse.
It won't feather first? What kind of Dash (let alone turboprop) are you flying? Even if it fails flat, you have the option of feathering first.I am guessing that in the flare the prop would be in Flight-Beta (Electric control?) which would really make it a mystery as to what would happen if you suddenly shut the engines down.
Simultaneous feathering. Grab both controls and feather. It is very simple. It will happen so fast that you will never feel a change in the aircraft until the feathering is complete. Then you compensate for the change. You are a pilot, you can do it I am sure of that.Second - you are going to take two 14 foot diameter (I'm guessing +/-) propellers and take it from min (high drag) through max (low drag - with a nice little kick) and then to feather ( no drag) at 10 feet with each engine acting at split second intervals to the other - not quite at the same time - at a low airspeed.
Maintain directional control. It's easy.You will be all over the place - and being that no pilot has probably ever performed this aerobatic maneuver before in his career to that point - probably going to really F !_! ( K up the landing and hit really hard So IF the gear does collapse there will be a big question if it would have collapsed anyway had you just followed the procedure.
Adjust your technique to prevent this from happening.Additonally - ask any 400 driver - you DO NOT REMOVE POWER until the wheels are ON THE GROUND or you pay the price.
Wrong. The time to feather is when you are committed to land, in the flare, if not already on the mains. Stabilized approach. You are obviously misunderstanding what I am saying. I am NOT saying to shut it down even as far as over the numbers. If you are more than 5 feet off the ground you are too far from the runway to shut the engines down. Have you never seen this done?Third - I realize that you have an "emergency", however I submit that there are different degrees of an "emergency" just like you can crap your pants or you can have explosive diarrhea in your pants. One is definetly preferable to the other. So Ms. Yeager - you shut two of your engines down on your Dash 8-400 and suddenly a gust of wind blows and now you are too high and drifting way left and you need power or the student pilot in a 152 doesn't hear the tower yelling at him to hold short of the runway and you need to go around - now what? You just took a semi-big deal emergency and got yourself into a situation where people ARE going to die.
Why? Your career would not end for attepting to be safe. You have the right, as the Captain, to do what it required to meet the extent of the emergency.Additionally - you do not KNOW the gear is going to collapse in this situation - yes it's unsafe - but is it a bad computer - bad prox switch - If you do this procedure the gear BETTER collapse or your career is over.
Huh? So have I.I've had to stop on the runway and have mx come out and pin/inspect the gear because of a faulty indication so it isn't unheard of, I would even bet somewhat common.
People got hurt. Some seriously, as a matter of fact. There was a fire, watch the video again. The right engine has black smoke coming from it. This aircraft DEPARTED the runway at an unnecessarilyextremely high velocity for the situation.The way I see the two SAS events is that with the exception of the initial failure - everything worked as planned. Yes the prop piereced the fuselage but it didn't puncture it in a place that injured anyone. The 1/2" Kevlar shield in the plane of the the props kept anything from penetrating where somebody would have gotten killed. No fire from impact. This happened twice - with presumably the same procedures used and in both cases nobody got killed.
Airplane is totaled, passengers injured. Not a success.Sounds like that at least as it relates to the QRH procedures used - it's a slam dunk success story.
Read your FAA material. Screw the engines, just don't let the props kill anyone or cause you to lose control.This "shutting down two engines" BS is from the flight school operators/135 bosses/owners trying to keep there engines from getting trashed. I know it has worked for some people (they saved the engine) but it isn't something that I would ever do in an airline operation under these circumstances.
Mach, a few questions:Igneousy2 is totally correct. I speak from experience since I had to land the mighty SAAB twice with a red light on one of the mains. Nowhere in the checklist did it say to shutdown both engines. Specifically for the reasons cited by Igneousy2. It did however have us move passengers out of the seats near the prop arcs which we did. Granted I never flew the stretch King Air or E-120 but my experience with the SAAB and ATR's is if you grab both condition levers and slammed them into feather and shutoff at the same time the props would not match each other in movement.
Depending on the situation. Right cicumstances, right decisions. Always lean on the side of safety of course. Viper asked me earlier and I responded no. If he would have specified the circumstance, I would have given him an answer that would fit the needs of the emergency keeping overall safety in mind.As far as shutting down an engine inflight to save fuel. There are times and types of aircraft where this is an appropriate procedure. Just ask the passengers on that AirTransat glider if they wished the CA had shutdown that engine.
So why would you shut an engine down to save fuel in a min fuel situation?Bottom line is if you start making stuff up outside of the QRH you will get hung out to dry at the hearing.
What happens when you really get on the line and can only learn through experience is that the VAST MAJORITY of the time you have a warning light on NOTHING HAPPENS.
Back in the 60s JAL routinely shut down two engines on the 707 on their Tokyo-New York City route. This was discover by Pan Am, because no matter how they tried Pan Am could not do the same route non-stop, stopping at PANC for fuel. So they put some line Pan Am pilots on the JAL flight and they figured it out. A friend of mine was one of the Pan Am pilots.
The FAA was not amused.