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Highflyer wrote:
I remember one time in a light twin. I decided to run the auxilliary tanks dry before returning to the mains so that I would have all of my remaining fuel in the mains for the approach and landing. I flew an hour on the mains to get some dump space for the overflow from the injectors and then switched to the aux tanks. After churning along on the auxs for some little time the right engine quit. As I was reaching for the fuel selector to switch it back to the main the left engine quit. The sudden total cessation of engine noise in midtrip got my passengers rather upset until I got them both making appropriate noises again and explained to them what had happened and why I did it that way. :-) Mea Maxima Culpa ... I had essentially the same thing happen to me one night coming back from Cleveland in a C-402. I'd been up for almost 24 hours and was exhausted (the flight had been scheduled for early the previous morning, cancelled and then rescheduled as I was getting ready for bed). I had flown all night in a mix of clouds, occasional icing, and VFR. I was moving auto parts from Shelby, NC to CLE, then back to CLT (my home base). No passengers; just me. I took off from Cleveland IFR and my attitude indicator croaked. There was another one on the copilot's side but I was on top before long so it was no big deal. I settled down to cruise on the mains. After an hour of hand flying, I switched over to the auxillary tanks. Then I fell asleep. I woke up to some yaw and less noise... the left engine had quit! I reached over to switch tanks and hit the boost pump to get a restart. Then the other one quit before I could switch that tank. Holy ****! That got my attention. I switched tanks on the right engine and hit that boost pump. By that time the left engine started. A moment later the right one came back. I remember complimenting myself on the accuracy of my fuel leaning. Whew! I swore to God I'd never fall asleep again while flying. I broke my promise twice before completing that flight. What do they say? Any flight that doesn't end up on the 11 o'clock news couldn't have been all that bad. It wasn't that great though... I fought 70 knot headwinds up to Cleveland (rode home at mach two), suffered a right brake failure, failed attitude indicator, got to play with ice, had the company credit card denied twice (at Charlie West and Cleveland), and ran the tanks dry. I really prefer the dull life. -- Mortimer Schnerd, RN VE |
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