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Fuel Management

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Fuel Management Simon Stuart Squadron 80 San Jose, CA Video Would you fly this airline? Courtesy AOPA * Fuel Starvation & Exhaustion Engine Failure: A condition ... – PowerPoint PPT presentation

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Title: Fuel Management


1
Fuel Management
Simon Stuart
Squadron 80
San Jose, CA
2
Video
  • Would you fly this airline?

Courtesy AOPA
2
3
Fuel Starvation Exhaustion
Engine Failure A condition which occurs when
all fuel tanks mysteriously become filled with
air.
  • Fuel Starvation
  • Engine cannot get available fuel
  • Selected tank runs dry
  • Contaminant blockage
  • Pump failure (Esp. low wing aircraft)
  • Forced landing inevitable unless prompt action
    taken.
  • Usually pilot error
  • Fuel Exhaustion
  • All tanks dry
  • Forced landing inevitable
  • Almost always pilot error

3
4
Do pilots just Forget?
  • Sometimes, but frequently the cause is
  • An error in preflight planning
  • Lack of enroute monitoring
  • Too hurried to divert and refuel
  • No pilot departs anticipating an accident.

4
5
Invulnerable Attitudes
Range Usually about 10 miles beyond the point
where all fuel tanks fill with air.
It wont happen to me.
That gauge cant be right.
This isnt happening!
5
6
Three Accidents per Week
  • Most do not show up as NTSB reports
  • Databases
  • NTSB http//www.ntsb.gov/ntsb/query.asp
  • FAA Accident / Incident Data System (AIDS)
    http//www.asias.faa.gov/
  • AOPA Fuel management Mishap Map
    http//www.aopa.org/asf/ntsb/fuelmap.cfm
  • NASA Aviation Safety Reporting System (ASRS)
    http//asrs.arc.nasa.gov/

6
7
NASA Aviation Safety Reporting System
If the pilot survives the accident, you'll never
find out what really happened. Doug Jeanes
  • The ASRS First hand pilot accounts
  • Different from NTSB reports
  • Learn from the mistakes of others
  • http//asrs.arc.nasa.gov/
  • Report Sets http//asrs.arc.nasa.gov/search/repor
    tsets.html
  • Fuel Reports http//asrs.arc.nasa.gov/docs/rpsts/
    fuel.pdf
  • Example ACN 849661. A CL65 Captain laments the
    low fuel loads that are routinely being used by
    dispatchers at his airline. Assessment Primary
    Problem Company Policy

7
8
Determining Fuel Levels
  • Traditional dipstick method
  • Analog fuel gauges
  • Only required to be accurate when empty
  • Digital fuel gauges
  • Fuel totalizers
  • Accurate to 1/10th gallon
  • Depends upon pilot setting after adding fuel
  • Glass Cockpit (e.g. G1000) Features
  • Range rings
  • Annunciations

8
9
Know Thy Airplane
  • Many pilots run afoul of fuel management when
    switching
  • between aircraft with different fuel systems.
  • Citabria 7ECA. High wing. Gravity fed. Off/On
    selector. No fuel pump
  • Cessna 182T. 13 sumps. 3 ways of confirming fuel
    levels during preflight. Totalizer accuracy
  • Bonanza 35. Many variations and some complex fuel
    systems. Up to 5 tanks. Left tank venting on some
    models
  • CG moves rearward. Possible landing out of CG
    envelope
  • Low fuel takeoff limits, 6g unusable

9
10
How Much Fuel Do You Need?
  • FAA Regulations
  • General (Part 91). E.g. Going up in Uncle Bobs
    plane
  • Commuter On Demand (Part 135). E.g. Aspen Air
    Charter
  • Scheduled Air Carrier (Part 121). E.g. United
    Airlines
  • Non-FAA Overlays
  • Airline Policy
  • Civil Air Patrol Requirements. E.g. 1 hour left?
    Land and refuel.
  • FAA Factors Influencing Reserves
  • Day, Night, VFR, IFR, Alternates
  • Other Factors To Consider
  • Mountains, Water, Icing, Altitude, Headwinds,
    Traffic
  • Personal Minimums
  • Arguably the most important
  • Developed from experience
  • Create a Risk Profile for the flight

10
11
Can You Carry Too Much Fuel?
"The only time an aircraft has too much fuel on
board is when it is on fire. Sir Charles
Kingsford Smith
  • well, not always
  • Additional fuel affects TAS only marginally.
  • Increasing weight 440lbs to MGTW in a Mooney 201
    reduces cruise speed by around 5 knots (3).
  • Additional fuel affects takeoff distances and
    rate of climb significantly.
  • A Cessna 182T departing Tahoe at 65F at MGTW vs.
    400lbs lighter will require an additional 1500
    to get to 50 AGL.
  • The ROC on a Mooney 201 would decrease by 50.

11
12
AOPA Recommendations
  • Flight Planning
  • Know your airplane
  • Give yourself an hour's reserve
  • Be realistic with routing
  • Check fuel availability
  • Remember aircraft performance
  • Note color and smell
  • Let water settle
  • Sump early, sump often
  • Dispose of fuel properly
  • Check for leaks
  • Verify quantity
  • In Flight
  • Check groundspeed
  • Lean and mean
  • Switch tanks regularly
  • Be prepared to divert
  • Tell ATC

http//www.aopa.org/asf/hotspot/fuel_check.html
12
13
Personal Experiences
  • Rapidly venting fuel. Palo Alto. Citabria.
  • Inaccurate gauge readings near the end of a 500nm
    cross country. San Jose. Cessna 182.
  • Broken gauge resulting in fuel starvation on
    final. Reid-Hillview. Cessna 172.
  • Over a quart of rainwater in a tank after a heavy
    overnight downpour. Oceanside. Bonanza P35.
  • High fuel burn due to low altitude plus headwinds
    resulting in diversion. Los Banos. Cessna 170.
  • Fortunately, all these situations ended with
    uneventful non- emergency landings. But they can
    happen to anyone.

13
14
Notable Fuel Related Accidents
  • Airlines
  • United 173. DC-8. Portland
  • Tuninter 1153. ATR-72. Tunisia
  • Charter
  • Pel-Air. Westwind. Norfolk Island
  • Bay Area Aircraft
  • N1857H. PA-28. Firebaugh
  • N2805E. Aeronca 7BC. Half Moon Bay
  • N9547D. PA-22. San Jose RHV
  • N5479A. C210. San Jose RHV
  • Other
  • N7589S. Cessna 182. Texas
  • Amelia Earhart

14
15
Case Study N16EJ
  • May 2000, Pennsylvania
  • Two Professional Pilots. Captain 8,500 hours TT
  • British Aerospace Jetstream 3101
  • PIC fails to check fuel prior to departure
  • Fuel exhaustion after cleared for the approach in
    IMC
  • 19 Fatalities

15
16
Other Suggestions
  • Special diligence required for expected IMC at
    the destination airport, especially with
    alternates.
  • Resist passenger pressure get-there-itis.
  • CAP Aircrew Check the gauges yourself. Prior to
    departure, politely ask the Mission Pilot key
    questions. Expect concise answers. It keeps
    professionalism high.
  • Sump carefully. Wait for additional fuel to
    settle. Failure to do so could easily result in a
    fatal situation on takeoff.

16
17
Additional Insight
  • AOPA Fuel Safety Advisor
  • http//www.aopa.org/asf/publications/sa16.pdf
  • AOPA Fuel Safety Brief
  • http//www.aopa.org/asf/publications/SB04.pdf
  • Pelicans Perch 7
  • http//www.warmkessel.com/jr/flying/td/jd/7.jsp

17
18
Summary
  • When it comes to fuel,
  • Getting it wrong
  • has consequences ranging
  • from embarrassing to fatal.
  • Be methodical. Remain aware.
  • Land if uncertain.

18
19
  • End of Presentation
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