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Dave,
I am glad you make it down with you and the plane in
one piece. Sounds like you kept a cool head and handled the situation as good as
anyone could have. (Note to self.... Every flight after any repairs
is a test flight.)
Bobby
I had to set my RV-6 down on highway 395 near Bishop Tuesday, and here is the
story. Mostly things I could have done better, some that I did right or
otherwise got lucky. It is an RV6 tip up with a turbocharged Mazda rotary
engine.
I took the RV up to Mammoth to ski for the weekend. When I returned to the
plane Sunday evening I discovered a small puddle of coolant under the engine. I
had some concerns about the cold as my antifreeze had been recently diluted with
water when I had to make a field repair of a coolant leak but I neglected to
replace the antifreeze (big mistake #1). I estimated 25/75 antifreeze/water and
the temperatures were supposed to be in the low 20's overnight. This I thought
would be enough but I was not sure. The puddle of coolant seemed to prove that
overnight the temp got low enough to freeze some coolant and crack something.
A quick look under the cowl failed to reveal the souce of the leak other than
it was not coming from the previously fixed coolant line or anywhere other than
the radiator itself. I didn't have time to trouble shoot as I had to get home to
be at work the next day.
I was able to hitch a ride home in another aircraft, then drive back up the
following evening after work. When I arrived at the airport at 10pm the
temperature was 3 deg F. In order to prevent any further damage, I added some
anti freeze and ran the engine for a while to circulate it. When I left the
airport at 11:30 pm the temperature was -3 deg. This is obviously colder than I
had expected and was probably responsible for the damage. The temperature in
town was 20 deg despite the fact that town is higher in elevation. The only
explanation I have for the extreme low temp at the airport is temperature loss
from sublimation of the vast deep snow fields around the airport in the very dry
air (just a guess).
I arrived at sun-up the next morning (temp again 4 deg at airport but 19 in
town) and got to work on fixing the leak. After several engine runs I determined
that the leak was indeed coming from somewhere in the radiator. There did not
seem to be any coolant in the oil, but I identified and fixed an oil leak in the
turbo oil return line. Also, the engine breather tube (which vents down in the
gear leg) had frozen and was causing the turbo to burn oil. That issue was fixed
as well.
In order to temporize the radiator leak I decided to use a can of radiator
stop-leak and switch coolant to Evan's NPG. NPG is a pure propylene glycol
coolant that has a very high boiling temp and can therefore be run with little
or no coolant system pressure. I switched out the coolant, added the stop-leak,
and changed to a 7 psi radiator cap. The stop-leak appeared to do it's job as
there was no visible continued leak after an hour of running the engine on the
ground at fast idle with some brief runs at higher RPM.
At about 2pm I was cold (temp at the airport now in the mid 20's) and tired
(had slept in the car overnight) but decided it was safe to make the flight to
Bishop - 27 miles away and 3000 feet lower. There I would remove the cowl and
give everything a good look. Since the coolant leak had only lost about a quart
in 3 days, was now sealed and would be flown with low pressure I assumed the
most I could loose in the 15 min flight would be about a cup of coolant (Big
mistake #2?)
The first 8 minutes of flight all systems were green. Then over the course of
a minute the coolant temp went up to over 280, oil temp up to over 200 (the
highest it has ever been). Being about half-way I decided to continue to the
lower Bishop airport. Then the alternator quit (buss voltage dropped to 11.7 and
battery showed a discharge). Then oil pressure dropped to zero, followed shortly
after by the engine stopping to make power and a puff of smoke coming in into
the cockpit thought the heater vent (cowl air - not a heat muff).
It appeared as though I would be able to glide to the Bishop airport. I was
at 9000 feet. Bishop was 13 miles away at 4000 feet with no significant winds.
This distance is solidly within the typical glide ratio of the RV6 so I calmly
assumed there would be an easy dead-stick onto the airport.
I tried to get the prop to stop windmilling by slowing. In my initial flight
testing I had been able to stop the prop from windmilling at about 80 kts.
However, even by slowing to 65kts IAS I was unable to stop the windmilling. It
turns out that overheating the engine had caused the loss of compression on all
rotor faces and this prevented me from stopping the windmilling. I was seeing
descent rates of 800-1000 fpm at 90 KIAS and it soon became apparent that making
the airport would be sketchy at best, so I opted for a quality highway rather
than try to overfly the town to make the airfield.
I was able to spot a section of Hwy 395 that was 4-lane divided (no opposing
traffic) that also seemed to be free of turns, power lines and intersections. I
relayed my situation to the Bishop unicom and got a prompt response. I turned
off my fuel pump and in accordance with my training turned off the master power
on short final... Doh! I have all electric flight instruments and now had no
time to re-boot either of my 2 air speed indicators.
My plan for traffic avoidance was to come in faster than typical traffic
speed, then bleed off that speed at 20 feet over the highway. That way any
traffic has plenty of time to see me and slow down while I am bleeding off
speed. Touchdown was uneventful and quite a relief. No injury or damage.
The Bishop police were there within minutes, and 2 hours later the plane was
tied down at the Bishop airport. I had no time or desire to remove the cowl so
the cause is still very unclear. A loss of the accessory belt would explain both
the inability to cool and the loss of the alternator, but my bet is still on
something to do with the extreme cold and radiator leak. I have to shamefully
admit that time pressures were a contributing factor. Feeling the need to return
home, I probably rushed the testing process after making repairs. I should have
circled Mammoth airport in order to test the repairs at high power before
attempting continued flight, especially in mountainous terrain (though there is
no freeway in SoCal that would be as forgiving as that section of 395).
I plan to rent some kind of truck next weekend and drive up, remove the
wings, and bring the plane home. It will remain in our garage for the next 8
months while I deploy to Iraq. (Suggestions or offers for use of an adequate
truck or trailer would be much appreciated). This will also give me a chance to
paint the plane and do a lot of the finishing touches that will be easier to do
at home than at the airport. Obviously I will need to rebuild the engine as
well, but that is a relatively minor issue.
This was quite a learning experience I obviously hope I never have to repeat.
All things considered, I feel quite lucky that things turned out so well.
Lastly, I want to thank the Bishop Unicom, Police Dept, Highway Patrol, Cal
Trans, and Fire Department who were all very professional and helpful. Also,
thank you to the fellow RV6 owner was passing by and took an hour and a half out
of his day to drive back up to Mammoth and get my car for me.
-- Dave Leonard Turbo Rotary RV-6 N4VY http://members.aol.com/_ht_a/rotaryroster/index.html http://members.aol.com/_ht_a/vp4skydoc/index.html
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