ATR down in Taipei

On the transport aircraft I've been trained to fly, we don't touch the thrust levers (except to shove them both forward) on V1 cuts until we get to a safe altitude and reconfigure the airplane before we start securing engines. Seems like there wasn't much in the way of coherent procedures happening in that cockpit.
I don't know the ATR, but the condition and prop levers might be combined, if the autofeather fails you have to do something pretty quick. However, from that data, it looks like it worked just fine.
 
I don't know the ATR, but the condition and prop levers might be combined, if the autofeather fails you have to do something pretty quick. However, from that data, it looks like it worked just fine.

As far as I recall, even in the Brasilia with an engine failure prop-did-not-feather, we still didn't touch anything til 1500'. I remember having a shaky leg after finally letting off the rudder pedal at altitude.
 
As far as I recall, even in the Brasilia with an engine failure prop-did-not-feather, we still didn't touch anything til 1500'. I remember having a shaky leg after finally letting off the rudder pedal at altitude.
The King Air 200 & 300 will climb with it unfeathered, but not well enough to meet any kind of climb gradient. You'll need to get it feathered. From what I've seen on the Saab 340, a negative autocoarsen needs to be dealt with really quick to.
 
As far as I recall, even in the Brasilia with an engine failure prop-did-not-feather, we still didn't touch anything til 1500'. I remember having a shaky leg after finally letting off the rudder pedal at altitude.
Um. Nope. That's what "POSITIVE RATE, GEAR UP, CHECK FEATHER / GEAR UP, PROP (FEATHERED, NOT FEATHERED)" meant; if the PM found the prop not feathered (and as PF, you would know even without the PM bumbling with the torque meter/Np tachometers) you absolutely had to take action right away. Autofeather had to be operative for every takeoff because the airplane would likely have zero to no climb performance with one propeller windmilling, to say nothing of what would happen control-wise. This case, and reversal/PCU failure, were the only "hurry up and do the right thing" things on the airplane.

"No action unless aircraft control or performance is marginal." You might get a few hundred feet per minute at V2 minus a few knots (e.g. not where you wanted to be) if the prop didn't feather.
 
I don't know the ATR, but the condition and prop levers might be combined, if the autofeather fails you have to do something pretty quick. However, from that data, it looks like it worked just fine.
They were the same lever on the Brasilia, and I'm pretty sure they're the same lever on the ATR (and Dash) as well. Combination fuel on/off, feathering and RPM selection.
 
The King Air 200 & 300 will climb with it unfeathered, but not well enough to meet any kind of climb gradient. You'll need to get it feathered. From what I've seen on the Saab 340, a negative autocoarsen needs to be dealt with really quick to.

Yeah, but in the 121 world, I think they design the performance numbers to account for these scenarios.
 
Yeah, but in the 121 world, I think they design the performance numbers to account for these scenarios.
Propeller feathering is assumed by certification requirements.
§ 25.111 Takeoff path.
(a) The takeoff path extends from a standing start to a point in the takeoff at which the airplane is 1,500 feet above the takeoff surface, or at which the transition from the takeoff to the en route configuration is completed and VFTO is reached, whichever point is higher. In addition—
...
(4) The airplane configuration may not be changed, except for gear retraction and automatic propeller feathering, and no change in power or thrust that requires action by the pilot may be made until the airplane is 400 feet above the takeoff surface; and

(this is why the sweet, wooshing sound of jets is so nice between V1 and Vfs.)
 
Yeah, but in the 121 world, I think they design the performance numbers to account for these scenarios.
Judging from the Saab and what Doug just mentioned, I'm pretty sure autofeather/coarsening device is presumed to work or you get it feathered. I know it is on the performance calculations on the KA300.

edit -
Propeller feathering is assumed by certification requirements.

2 seconds too late
 
Um. Nope. That's what "POSITIVE RATE, GEAR UP, CHECK FEATHER / GEAR UP, PROP (FEATHERED, NOT FEATHERED)" meant; if the PM found the prop not feathered (and as PF, you would know even without the PM bumbling with the torque meter/Np tachometers) you absolutely had to take action right away. Autofeather had to be operative for every takeoff because the airplane would likely have zero to no climb performance with one propeller windmilling, to say nothing of what would happen control-wise. This case, and reversal/PCU failure, were the only "hurry up and do the right thing" things on the airplane.

"No action unless aircraft control or performance is marginal." You might get a few hundred feet per minute at V2 minus a few knots (e.g. not where you wanted to be) if the prop didn't feather.

Okay, that sounds right. I brain dumped a lot of stuff from that airplane it seems.
 
I should really delete some of this information to make room for useful things, like more songs on the guitar.

Yeah, especially if you want to impress college chicks. :D

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The King Air 200 & 300 will climb with it unfeathered, but not well enough to meet any kind of climb gradient. You'll need to get it feathered. From what I've seen on the Saab 340, a negative autocoarsen needs to be dealt with really quick to.

A negative autocoarsen event in the Saab 340 was a handful. Generally resulted in full control surface deflections at some point during the event. If the prop did not autocoarsen, it was the job of the PM to select the condition lever to FUEL OFF, but only after confirming the correct condition lever with the PF. Even though the Saab had near zero performance in a negative autocoarsen situation, it was no time to be simply grabbing and moving levers without identifying, verifying, confirming, then feathering via shutdown (or manual feather pump if you were having a really bad day*)


*in the sim. If memory serves, Saab has never had a 340 not autocoarsen.
 
A negative autocoarsen event in the Saab 340 was a handful. Generally resulted in full control surface deflections at some point during the event. If the prop did not autocoarsen, it was the job of the PM to select the condition lever to FUEL OFF, but only after confirming the correct condition lever with the PF. Even though the Saab had near zero performance in a negative autocoarsen situation, it was no time to be simply grabbing and moving levers without identifying, verifying, confirming, then feathering via shutdown (or manual feather pump if you were having a really bad day*)


*in the sim. If memory serves, Saab has never had a 340 not autocoarsen.
Really quick was relative. On the jet it's like, oh an engine failed.... we'll get to that in a few minutes.
 
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