Bandit_Driver
Gold Member
IF done right you can fuel a helo with the Flared jet A nozzle (TOP) just fine. The smaller round (BOTTOM) nozzle for helos just makes it easier.
Confirmed this morning that it was mis-fueled. Allegedly, the truck was not well marked, and had helicopter adapters on the fuel nozzle, and so the fueler "thought" that he was dispensing 100LL.
Now, obviously, it'll be a while before all the facts to come out, but I, personally, can't understand how you could "think" that you were dispensing Low Lead while you were pumping kerosene.
Unfortunately it would not have helped here since the pilot did sign a 100LL slip.Definitely food for thought here. I usually fuel my plane, but sometimes am at a base where a vendor fuels for me. And when they do, they always hand me a fuel slip which shows both the fuel type and quantity. I always double check the amount pumped, but never the fuel type. That's going to change.
Unfortunately it would not have helped here since the pilot did sign a 100LL slip.
Sadly, he had no reason to believe that anything but 100LL had been pumped into his plane, due to this.
I can't speak to other part 135 companies, but at mind (also a EMS operator) you're only required to sump the tanks once per shift (2x a day, 1 AM 1PM) because we have fuel quality letters that indicate that the fuel at these FBOs meet or exceed our fuel quality standards.Except he skipped one critical step that would have prevented this. Sumping the tanks.
There's also that part where he only took 20 gallons a side. He had quite a bit of fuel and was just looking for a little bit of security. Jet won't immediately settle to the bottom for quite a few minutes and in that time the patient had already arrived. Yes, ultimately the blame rests on the PIC by not supervising the entire fueling process and I'm sure we can come up with another 20 reasons what the pilot should have done to check his fuel. But in the time allotted in the hurried pace of air ambulance, you don't always have time to sump or to wait for the fuel to settle or double check what the line guy is putting in your airplane.Except he skipped one critical step that would have prevented this. Sumping the tanks.
There's also that part where he only took 20 gallons a side. He had quite a bit of fuel and was just looking for a little bit of security. Jet won't immediately settle to the bottom for quite a few minutes and in that time the patient had already arrived. Yes, ultimately the blame rests on the PIC by not supervising the entire fueling process and I'm sure we can come up with another 20 reasons what the pilot should have done to check his fuel. But in the time allotted in the hurried pace of air ambulance, you don't always have time to sump or to wait for the fuel to settle or double check what the line guy is putting in your airplane.
I can't speak to other part 135 companies, but at mind (also a EMS operator) you're only required to sump the tanks once per shift (2x a day, 1 AM 1PM) because we have fuel quality letters that indicate that the fuel at these FBOs meet or exceed our fuel quality standards.
It may guarantee the quality of the fuel, but that letter would have been useless here. Always double check someone else's work with stuff like this. How many times have we all hard of a line guy doing something as simple as forgetting a fuel cap?
There's also that part where he only took 20 gallons a side. He had quite a bit of fuel and was just looking for a little bit of security. Jet won't immediately settle to the bottom for quite a few minutes and in that time the patient had already arrived. Yes, ultimately the blame rests on the PIC by not supervising the entire fueling process and I'm sure we can come up with another 20 reasons what the pilot should have done to check his fuel. But in the time allotted in the hurried pace of air ambulance, you don't always have time to sump or to wait for the fuel to settle or double check what the line guy is putting in your airplane.
This. 20 gallons of kerosene mixed into ~100 gallons of 100LL is not going to just settle to the bottom in the 4 min between fueling and firing back up. We all agree that ultimately this is the PIC's problem and liability, however, for better or worse, real life extenuating circumstances do come into play.