GreenDayPilot
Well-Known Member
Can anyone tell me about the accumulators in the Seminole's PROP System? Anything and everything about'em...
Thanks!
EDIT: PROP... ooops...
Thanks!

EDIT: PROP... ooops...
Now here's a question I remember being asked, that I have since forgotten: Is the oil in the accumulator engine oil, or hydraulic oil? The point of the question is to understand whats putting the oil in them.
Another tidbit I remember is that the oil is countered by compressed nitrogen(?) so that when you unfeather, the oil doesn't just stay in there.
Now he's really going to be confused when he moves up to an aircraft that does have prop oil.It's prop oil. Don't you ever check your prop oil?
Just kidding....
True story...
When I was instructing in PHX we had almost all 2000 models out there. The 79 versions didn't do as well in the heat so we lucked out with the newer ones. Our newest instructor at the time lived in PHX and had done the 90 day program out of PHX. He went off to JAX, did his standardization and came back out to PHX to instruct. Somehow, in all the Seminole flying he had never been in a 79 model. Anyhow, his very first day on the job he took up an MEI candidate to do some airwork. I was up doing pattern work with another student when they called up tower about 20 minutes later and declared an emergency. Apparently they had shut down the left engine in flight for a training maneuver but could not get it started. So the trucks rolled and I cut my lesson short and landed to be on the ground when they got back. The approach and landing were pretty good and the biggest issue was the CFI trying to taxi the plane single engine. The trucks followed him to the ramp where he shut down no problem, gave the ARFF guys some info and called it a day. He was all set to call JAX and get some MX for the airplane when I had him walk through what happened. He described shutting down the engine, doing the maneuver and then bringing the the prop out of feather to get the engine spinning again, but of course nothing happened.
It took me about 10 minutes to stop laughing and explain to him that there were no accumulators on the 79 model and he had to bump the prop with the starter.
Wasn't there an attempt to restart in the checklist? I think I remember something about that in those long, horrible checklists ATP had...
the ATP checklist for the 00 models notes to engage the starter if the prop fails to windmill.
It took me about 10 minutes to stop laughing and explain to him that there were no accumulators on the 79 model and he had to bump the prop with the starter.
No wonder I never heard of accumulators...I only flew in some raggedy old 'Nole.
I was wondering if you could get them to start by diving without using the starter? Not brave enough to try it.