Center_Mid
Well-Known Member
Every once in a while I come across an article in IFR, Flying or wherever about multi engine accidents related to failure to identify the correct engine in an engine-out scenario. Usually, the pilot hastily feathers the wrong prop and compounds his airspeed problems.
My question is, why don't piston twins just have a big, in-your-face warning system that tells the pilot which engine has failed? I mean, especially some of these new planes with EECs and so forth, why can't you just look at an EICAS screen on the G1000 to determine which engine failed? I'm neither an engineer nor even a ME pilot, but couldn't RPM or manifold pressure or a prop governor (or some combination of parameters) be jury rigged to set off a bright, annoying cockpit indicator that would clearly say "LEFT Engine Fail"? And then you could have one of those sexy voice alerts simultaneously say "Feather LEFT propeller" over the intercom or something like that. Wouldn't that take the guesswork out of it and save time trying to figure out which prop to feather (especially in IMC)?
Maybe they have all of this now and I haven't heard, but it seems that "dead foot, dead engine" is a primitive method to rely on in the face of all of the techno hotness we have at our disposal.
My question is, why don't piston twins just have a big, in-your-face warning system that tells the pilot which engine has failed? I mean, especially some of these new planes with EECs and so forth, why can't you just look at an EICAS screen on the G1000 to determine which engine failed? I'm neither an engineer nor even a ME pilot, but couldn't RPM or manifold pressure or a prop governor (or some combination of parameters) be jury rigged to set off a bright, annoying cockpit indicator that would clearly say "LEFT Engine Fail"? And then you could have one of those sexy voice alerts simultaneously say "Feather LEFT propeller" over the intercom or something like that. Wouldn't that take the guesswork out of it and save time trying to figure out which prop to feather (especially in IMC)?
Maybe they have all of this now and I haven't heard, but it seems that "dead foot, dead engine" is a primitive method to rely on in the face of all of the techno hotness we have at our disposal.