Roger Roger
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I have several hundred hours in a chieftain and I can't imagine any circumstance other than maintenance where you would have to pull the pump breakers.Hi, A150K,
I’m scheduled to start AMF’s training for the Chieftain on September 8th with the U.S. Aviation Academy prep week in Denton. I’ve been working through the training materials and have some questions I hope you’ll answer.
1. Pages 34 and 35 (weather) of the Indoc Study Guide essentially copies the table of contents of Aviation Weather (AC 00-6A). Does AMF really expect newbies to know High Altitude Weather, Arctic Weather, and Tropical Weather? I’d like to spend my limited time studying other, more likely topics.
2. I read somewhere there is an admission/acceptance test the first day. Is this correct and, if so, is that test a checking item or simply to get a level set on where everyone in the class is book-learning wise?
3. The Chieftain performance and systems materials seem a little thin. For example, I couldn’t find Vx, Vy, Vno and Va (at lighter weights). I assume we’ll go through the AFM in more detail in class since that information isn’t in the training package.
4. Some fuel quantities are given in gallons and others in pounds. Should I learn gallons, pounds or both?
5. Is there a power/pitch/performance table for the Chieftain? For example, the SOP calls for 10 degrees pitch up at rotation and then to pitch down to 130 KTS at 1000’ AGL. What airspeed does takeoff power and 10 degrees pitch up give you?
6. The SOP isn’t clear about use of flaps on approach. The materials call for 120 KTS throughout the approach and then put down flaps as appropriate when the landing is assured while slowing to Vref of 90 KTS. This seems like the exact opposite of a stabilized approach if you don’t add flaps until breaking out 200 and 1/2 on an ILS, for example.
7. When do you pull the continuous duty fuel pump circuit breakers? I don’t see that item called out on the After Landing, Shut Down or Terminating flows or checklists.
8. I’ve been reading you posts about your AMF training with great interest. Today you mentioned a partial panel/single engine ILS. My paper tiger shows a full six-pack on the right side of the panel. Does partial panel mean that you have at least one working attitude indicator or does AMF expect you to fly an ILS to minimums with no pitch reference except VSI, airspeed, power and the GS needle? (This is one reason why a power/pitch/performance table would be nice to have.) I have recent (simulated) no-gyro partial panel ILS experience and, frankly, I struggled quite a bit to keep the GS needle in the ball park. Should I go back in the sim even before showing up in Denton?
I hope you don’t mind this deluge of questions and I really look forward to your answers.
Thanks and take care,
Bob
And the flap procedure seems insane. Flaps 15 joining the fac and aiming for 150 downhill works real good. ..