Re: Emergency and Discipline



On Mar 1, 7:24 am, Jim Stewart <jstew...@xxxxxxxxxxx> wrote:
Ol Shy & Bashful wrote:

If you are faced with a full blown emergency such as an engine
failure, what are you  going to do?
Open ended question to generate some more conversation and
discussions. In my more than 50 years of aviation, I've had at least
18 actual emergencies and survived them all. Only one resulted in
physical injury and that was more than 40 years ago.
It is disconcerting to read the modern aircraft manuals (civilian) and
see most of it relates to shutting down the engine/s and heading for a
landing area rather than dealing with the emergency and keeping the
aircraft flying if possible.
Anyone want to hazard a guess at the major number of engine failure
causes?

Here's what my instructor and I have been practicing..

If low, establish glide, secure engine, pick a spot
and land, flaps 40 and full stall if possible.

If high, establish glide, check fuel valve, try
restarts, throttle open, choke open, choke closed,
mag 1, mag 2, anything else you can think of...

If no luck, secure engine, look for field within gliding
distance.  If developed airfield, call for priority and
land.  If off-field, call 121.5, pick spot and stick
to it and land, flaps 40 and full stall.  If terrain
is hostile, decrease airspeed, point plane at best
place and pull chute.


I'd say, after getting the glide started, FMOST checks, recheck trim
for best glide, establish landing area, plan approach, squark 7700,
MAYDAY on working frequency or 121.5, passenger brief, EPIRB, secure
engine, masters off after no further use for electrical power. Land
the plane (? chute) and seek out a telephone -but if in the
wilderness, prepare for survival and if the plane survived, check the
EPIRB is transmitting. If you see/hear a plane try the VHF. Look after
the passengers. Start a fire (sufficiently away from the plane). I've
probably forgotten something...

Cheers

If terrain were hostile, you might want to consider location a bit
before you pull that chute handle by the way.
.



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