any merit in running dual battery packs ?
Keith Hoard
khoard at midsouth.rr.com
Tue Jan 25 09:43:36 AKST 2005
Only if the plane weighs more than 12,500 lbs. Any certified airplane less
than that weight is not required to maintain level flight on a single
engine.
I don't know what the certification process was back in Lindberg's time,
though.
Keith L. Hoard
Cordova, TN
khoard at midsouth.rr.com
_____
From: discussion-request at nsrca.org [mailto:discussion-request at nsrca.org] On
Behalf Of Bill Glaze
Sent: Tuesday, January 25, 2005 12:25 PM
To: discussion at nsrca.org
Subject: Re: any merit in running dual battery packs ?
Bob:
Never heard that story. thanks. Also, nowadays twin engine airplanes can
maintain a safe altitude on a single engine. Or so they told me when I got
my type rating on the 757/767. :-P Sure hope they weren't kidding me!
Bill Glaze
Bob Richards wrote:
Bill,
OTOH, remember the Rutan Voyager? Two centerline engines, the front engine
was to be shut off and feathered after it was no longer needed. Rutan wanted
to leave the electric starter off, since it would not be needed once it left
the ground. The engine maker (Teledyne?) convinced him to keep the starter
on, "just in case".
Halfway around the world, a fuel managment problem caused the rear engine to
momentarily quit, and the nose-down glide prevented the fuel pickup to draw
fuel again to the rear engine. The front engine was started again, and once
level flight was established the fuel began flowing again to the rear
engine. (Best recollection of the story that I can remember from reading
Dick Rutan's book).
You can never think of all the ways redundancy can pull your a** out of the
fire!!
Bob R.
Bill Glaze <mailto:billglaze at triad.rr.com> <billglaze at triad.rr.com> wrote:
In those days a twin engine airplane couldn't maintain flight on just one
engine, in most cases. So, in his book, (We) Lindbergh stated that twin
engines "gave twice as much chance of an engine failure." The only thing
two engines did, was to insure that you had enough power to make it to the
crash scene.
Bill Glaze
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