SPORTPILOT
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RE: A Hidden Gem (SportPilot 99) Dear Editor, I just read another article mentioning traditional steam driven gauges (flight instruments). There are the airspeed and vertical speed which work off differential air pressures and the altimeter which works off air pressure compared to an adjustable reference pressure. There’s the attitude indicator and directional gyro driven by suction, and the turn bank indicator with an electric gyro and a balance ball that works on gravity. Where is the steam? There are also engine instruments that work off temperature and pressure probes in relevant places. If there is any steam present, they do not work, such as if there is not enough water in the cooling system the gauge will read normal while the engine overheats and “cooks”. Where again is the steam, in a properly functioning system? Or is “steam driven gauges” just a stupid term used by idiot trendies to mock old technologies? Ken Glascow
Editor: Hi Ken. The term “steam gauge” gets thrown around here and there as a somewhat tonguein-cheek reference for the standard “six pack” of flight instruments. This is in comparison to “glass” cockpits which, on reflection, isn’t exactly the most straightforward name either. You’re right, steam gauges don’t actually run on steam, but the six pack isn’t full of beer either! The beauty of the English language I suppose…
RE: Going Ballistic (SportPilot 100) Dear Editor, The article starts off by asserting that John Nixon “suddenly lost oil pressure” at 5,000 feet above the Gilgandra district, and that he landed by BPRS “within one minute of the oil gauge indicating the problem.” It goes on to say that John and his passenger were extremely lucky their aircraft had a BPRS fitted. I beg to differ, as too would the poor written-off aircraft, if it had a voice. To start at the end of the story, the aircraft was substantially damaged (though the engine was already destroyed) as the result of electing to use the BPRS instead of making an emergency landing in the numerous large flat paddocks below. Some have supported using the BPRS instead of conducting a forced landing on the ludicrous notion that the SR22 does not have a steerable nose wheel so couldn’t land safely. The only valid argument I see is that at a likely landing speed of around 60 knots, you will have problems if you find a hole or a rock or some such - but that certainly isn’t a case of probable death - rather, the probable outcome of a competently executed forced landing in
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