Boris Badenov
Fortis Leader
Shush. It'd put Pratt out of bidness, and there'd be no more "PT-6 Nation" fanboi idiocy. Can't have that!
The funny thing is, there is so much more to manage on a pratt. The 331 is far easier to fly.Shush. It'd put Pratt out of bidness, and there'd be no more "PT-6 Nation" fanboi idiocy. Can't have that!
We actually did it once on purpose in training.
All of them that I flew have, but Borris alluded to having to get the manual out.I take it not all installs come with a unfeathering pump then?
All of them that I flew have, but Borris alluded to having to get the manual out.
We did let one feather in itraining and put it on the locks just to see it.
No sir, I was TRAINED PROPERLY. Ok, maybe once when I'd tried to start the thing without a powercart at like -10C, but that doesn't count. Because I say it doesn't. And lord didn't I have a fun time trying to figure out how to get it back on the locks, thumbing through the manual with thumbs I couldn't feel. I mean, theoretically.
And what does the -511C stand for?Unfeathering pump! I got to learn how to unfeather the -10R-511C. Getting ready for my SIC ride in the CASA.
Couldn't you just not manually feather it like you normally do? I've let a pt6 spin down on it's own before and it takes forever as does the feathering.Ok..heres the skinny...some applications using a pt 6 such as the Pilatus pc 12 have whats called the feather interrupt switch. They reccomend using it on shut down to mitigate sucking fod in when it feathers on the ramp. Once below 200 rpm on the shut down sequence, you release the fx interrupt switch and then it will feather.
Isn't it all in one power lever with no control of pitch?Couldn't you just not manually feather it like you normally do? I've let a pt6 spin down on it's own before and it takes forever as does the feathering.
Isn't it all in one power lever with no control of pitch?
Ok..heres the skinny...some applications using a pt 6 such as the Pilatus pc 12 have whats called the feather interrupt switch.
??? They must have forgotten to put this on ours.
Isn't it all in one power lever with no control of pitch?
Ah, I've only flown pratts on beechcraft. 3 levers.Correct.
Another way to prevent the prop from feathering in the pc12 is to turn the batteries off before shut down, but I wouldn't recommend that.
I don't know about the five, but the other numbers indicate we have duplex nozzles, and a hartzell propeller.And what does the -511C stand for?
IIRC the first number is the fuel controller. There's two options, bendix and woodward, you can tell which one you have by looking at the intake, right in front of the compressor there's a difference between the temperature and pressure probe(s) for the two.I don't know about the five, but the other numbers indicate we have duplex nozzles, and a hartzell propeller.
Interesting. I did not know that about the fuel controller. About the prop, all I know is i read that 511c is hartzell, and 512c is dowty.IIRC the first number is the fuel controller. There's two options, bendix and woodward, you can tell which one you have by looking at the intake, right in front of the compressor there's a difference between the temperature and pressure probe(s) for the two.
Thing about the props though is most aircraft have an STC for something different than what came with it.
I never did either, but thats what the unfeathering pump is for.... AKA the dummy pumpNo sir, I was TRAINED PROPERLY. Ok, maybe once when I'd tried to start the thing without a powercart at like -10C, but that doesn't count. Because I say it doesn't. And lord didn't I have a fun time trying to figure out how to get it back on the locks, thumbing through the manual with thumbs I couldn't feel. I mean, theoretically.