CoffeeIcePapers
Well-Hung Member
More like once a decade.135 we absolutely did the best we could. But a couple Houston Texas based guys who see this weather maybe once a year? Rare
More like once a decade.135 we absolutely did the best we could. But a couple Houston Texas based guys who see this weather maybe once a year? Rare
Aw cmon don’t all the Texas rednecks that can afford private jets migrate to ASE every year and do their best Tokyo drift impression?More like once a decade.
As a ex corporate guy who did this exact kind of flying…aka, small part 91 operation with 1 plane.
No one uses hold over times and nobody has an app for that.
They literally had no idea. 100% guaranteed.
More like once a decade.
Not helping the case for us from having to do the “walk of shame” after deice….Having flown earlier in the day and a snap roll on airport property does point towards an asymmetric lift issue...
Not helping the case for us from having to do the “walk of shame” after deice….
Tbh though, i REALLY do not get why people make a big deal about deice in 121. Youre paid by the minute, you dont pay the bill….just do it thoroughly and right ffs. If in doubt, even the slightest, call iceman, run the procedures and checklist. Of ALL the things people are concerned with “newer” FOs being exposed to before upgrade, why the f do we make deice a big deal?
-17C. At 3/4 SM that's moderate snow if we derive it from prevailing visibility. Just looked it up for curiosity's sake and the holdover time for a generic Type IV in those conditions is 2-7 min. That's some nasty weather.
One Twenty Weenies can usually get better than generic. Cryotech Polar Guard and Clariant Safewing have much, much higher holdover times than generic type IV.
Thank you for saying my thoughts.Have you ever de-iced in a non-121 airplane?
No. Take a seat and wait this one out.
Also, go ahead and check the HOT table for generic type IV and Clariant Safewing Plus.
Thank you for saying my thoughts.
Have you ever de-iced in a non-121 airplane?
No. Take a seat and wait this one out.
Also, go ahead and check the HOT table for generic type IV and Clariant Safewing Plus.
So you’ve only operated using an FAA-approved company ground icing procedure. Very different from dealing with a FBO and having to use AFM procedures (for starters, HOTs are advisory only on the NearJet I fly and we have to do a tactile check within 5 minutes of departure).Relevance? Have flown and deiced in a CRJ-200 many times, which is a similar airframe supercritical wing design.
Can I ask your experience in aviation and deicing?
I have an app for that. Is there a particular question I can answer? At -17C night snowprevail vis 3/4SM as mod intensity, generic type IV is 2-9 min and Clariant Safewing is 6-20 min. So about 2-3x more. Even better is Cryotech Polar Guard at 20-40 minutes.
Again. Did you have a particular point? Or a question?
Relevance?
Can I ask your experience in aviation and deicing?
Again. Did you have a particular point? Or a question?
So you’ve only operated using an FAA-approved company ground icing procedure. Very different from dealing with a FBO and having to use AFM procedures (for starters, HOTs are advisory only on the NearJet I fly and we have to do a tactile check within 5 minutes of departure).
The relevance is that you professionally have flown very few aircraft, and your scope of experience is entirely within 121.
It has been two weeks since my most recent de-ice, and I have been to that airport in the winter. It would take some research to confirm, but I might have even de-iced there. I do recall one trip I had an AOG event and worked with the FBO to get maintenance on the field to resolve the issue.
Sure, do you know what de-ice fluid, mixture and temperature was applied?
You might be surprised to know that not all FBOs use generic SAE type IV (that's SAE AMS1428M, in case you're wondering), Safewing is more common than you think.
If anyone wants to read up about the specification required for all type IV fluids:
AMS1428M: Fluid, Aircraft Deicing/Anti-Icing, Non-Newtonian (Pseudoplastic), SAE Types II, III, and IV - Material Specification
<div class="section abstract"> <div class="htmlview paragraph">The AMS1428 specification defines the technical requirements for Type II, III, and IV aircraft deicing/anti-icing fluids. These non-Newtonian thickened fluids are formulated to effectively remove frost, ice, and snow from aircraft...saemobilus.sae.org
Um, ok?
And all this started with me literally saying One twenty Weenies having access to better/more options of type IV.
Was that wrong? Sounds like you and CFI are making the case.
No slats, much like the DC-9-10s, of which some insane percentage, like I want to say 10%? crashed on takeoff in icing.
That's from hazy memory of my *extremely* dog-earred copy of a collection of Flying Magazine "Aftermath" columns (back when Flying Magazine wasn't just basically an advertisement for ways to kill yourself if you're rich). $10 says that particular article was written by Peter Garrison, he was the best.I don’t even care if your stat is true, I’ve embraced it.
How is this relevant to the generic commentary that 121 has access to different (better types) of type IV?
We did DTW-BGR in the NWA days and deiced there too. Again I don’t see your point.
Yes, they give us that info.
Again I don’t see your point with the quick dismissal stat-in-your-lane and sit this out comment based on a simple commentary about better type IV access for 121.