Cowboy.:rawk:And apparently lucky I've survived this long flying in weather!
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Cowboy.:rawk:And apparently lucky I've survived this long flying in weather!
Psh, gain settings...
Thats why we all need Nexrad or XMish stuff.
I cant recall, does that even have a gain control? I fly the encore+ so few and far between these days.
Does Nexrad or XM give you the tops of what you're looking at? Last I heard, years ago by the way, is that you don't get the tops so you could be looking at something big red and nasty and realize you are gonna top it by 20,000 ft. Or worse ask to deviate around it when there is nothing at your altitude. I think this is why ATC sometimes tells you that you have heavy to moderate precip at 12 o'clock when all you see are some clouds down beneath you.
Is the lesson to put it back in the CAL position after flight, or ensuring that equipment is in the right mode when you intend to use it?![]()
Who returns the plane to service. Mx or pilot?Once I rented a plane that was just out of annual. When I rotated the nose shot up and I had to push down really hard to prevent a stall. The mechanic had left the trim in the full aft position.
My error or the mechanics?
Please...please...if you insist on taking the gain out of the preset setting, please make sure that you put it back before handing the aircraft off to someone else. Got a nasty little surprise today banging into a nice yellow cell that wasn't painting on the radar. Turns out the gain was turned all the way down. Partly my fault for not catching it, but there's no conceivable reason to take a radar out of the preset gain for more than a moment or two to get rid of a little clutter; it can be outright dangerous if you don't put it back.
This has been a PSA, brought to you by your friendly neighborhood piston pounder who's running around down low.![]()
Seriously...gonna be that guy, huh...
I already said my mea culpas in my first post. Yep, I screwed up by not seeing it. Now, please raise your hand if you've never missed something or done something incorrectly. I need to pick your brain and learn from you! This also occurred on my 26th leg in the previous 4 days. Stuff happens when you fly that much.
This post is meant to be a reminder to 1) remember to return the gain to preset (low gain could be hazardous to you and the next crew), and 2) check to make sure it's in preset before you go.
Anyone else want to get their cracks in? We've sure got some amazing aviators here at JC.
Dude seriously,
He was just making a point, yes, we all make mistakes, but that's what we always need to minimize as pilots, and I'm sorry although I agree with your second point of this thread I cannot agree with the first part. Hey everyone please ensure the landing gear handle is left in the down position when you leave the aircraft, I don't want the wheels to tuck away during my take-off roll :banghead:
No disrespect, but you just made a thread to rant about someone's fault for you not doing your job, of checking the proper setup of a piece of equipment prior to use?? Basically you are saying that due to your complacency you could have endangered the lives of your passengers but it's partly the fault of the previous crew? Let me know how that goes with the FAA!
I bet from now on you'll now make it a point to check the gain when using the radar.
Dude seriously,
He was just making a point, yes, we all make mistakes, but that's what we always need to minimize as pilots, and I'm sorry although I agree with your second point of this thread I cannot agree with the first part. Hey everyone please ensure the landing gear handle is left in the down position when you leave the aircraft, I don't want the wheels to tuck away during my take-off roll :banghead:
On our radar the gain knob, it does NOTHINK!! Maintenance disabled it and set the gain to low manually. I'm not sure why.
Probably so you don't run late by deviating around weather. Don't be late, penetrate!
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