Pilotforhire587
Lycra Man
Had a V1 cut on the critical engine in the dash about 3 weeks ago. Had already been a very long day... and a very long trip at that. We were on our 3rd leg of 5 for the day, departing 4R in EWR and at about 90 knots got a #1 AC GEN caution. Captain said to continue so I did, about 15 knots later time to rotate. I started to pitch the nose up and it just didn't come of the ground like it usually did. I never heard a change in power or anything else out of the ordinary just felt weak. I looked down to check the torques and the #1 engine was down to about 30%. #2 was still at 95% where we set it. I looked further down to see if maybe the friction lock was loose and the power lever had fallen back... Nope right up there with number two... Damn, I think to myself this is for real... what an day... I look at the other #1 engine gauges and RPM is down too, look back at torque and it was on its way back to normal. Between the ground and 600 feet the engine surged between normal power and 30-40 percent torque three times. Finally around 600' it feathered. Engine was still running and the torque never dropped below the autofeather limit that we saw so we called it an unscheduled feather and continued... Ran the EP and the captain ran checklists for the next 20 minutes while I got vectors and flew back and forth on a down wind for the 4's.
Turns out after maint. had a chance to look at it, the #1 AC Gen had crapped the bed, seized and caused the drop in torque, then when the shear pin finally went the Gen pooped its guys into the prop reduction gearbox... All that metal continued to cause drag on it is probably what gave us the feather. The kicker is, we got back into EWR the next night for a 2 hour sit before heading out for our overnight and scheduling called wanting us to test fly it... AT NIGHT IN THE SAME AIRPLANE THAT FAILED THE DAY BEFORE!!! YEAH RIGHT...
It was great to see how your training kicks in like that and I am happy to say I have an interview story now. It was also good practice for reccurrent next month and great experience. I don't want to be morbid and say I am glad it happened to me but I kind of am. The Dash it much easier to fly on one engine than it is in the sim.
It was a great learning experience.
Turns out after maint. had a chance to look at it, the #1 AC Gen had crapped the bed, seized and caused the drop in torque, then when the shear pin finally went the Gen pooped its guys into the prop reduction gearbox... All that metal continued to cause drag on it is probably what gave us the feather. The kicker is, we got back into EWR the next night for a 2 hour sit before heading out for our overnight and scheduling called wanting us to test fly it... AT NIGHT IN THE SAME AIRPLANE THAT FAILED THE DAY BEFORE!!! YEAH RIGHT...
It was great to see how your training kicks in like that and I am happy to say I have an interview story now. It was also good practice for reccurrent next month and great experience. I don't want to be morbid and say I am glad it happened to me but I kind of am. The Dash it much easier to fly on one engine than it is in the sim.
It was a great learning experience.