Having been there, done that - here are few 
    suggestions, Al
     
     
    1.  First thing, establish best glide 
    speed
    2. Second thing, push NST button on GPS to locate 
    nearest airfield
    3. Turn aircraft to heading of 
    selected  airfield showing on GPS (this so while you are messing 
    around with other things  you are also getting 
    closer to a possible safe landing {:> )  Recommend 
    the airfield  that is downwind of your location (if distances are 
    nearly the same between airfield choices)
    4.  Announce on radio  your predicament 
    and intentions - don't end up in a long conversation, you've got other 
    things to do, but at least somebody may hear you and can start a search in 
    the right area - if heaven forbid -that should be come 
    necessary.
     
    Don't wait to do these things else you could get 
    so tied up in your trouble shooting that you may wait too 
    late.
     
    5.  Determine if a fuel problem - if you 
    have normal fuel pressure showing - the odds are its not a fuel 
    associated problem but something else
       If fuel pressure is down 
    then
        a.  Turn on Boost 
    pump
        b. Select alternative fuel 
    tank (learned that one the hard way)
        c.  Turn on Alternate EFI 
    pump (if not  already on)
    if not a fuel problem then likely a controller or 
    electrically associated problem (unlikely a leaking injector would cause the 
    engine to quit - I had one that would stick wide open in flight and while 
    you noticed the effect the engine did not stop running)
     
    6. Select Alternate Controller 
    B
    7.  Check system voltage
    8. Switch to Alternative battery (if you have 
    one)
    9. Reset any popped Circuit 
    breaker
    10. Temporarily turn on the cold start switch (I 
    had this actually give me approx 30 sec more engine run time although I am 
    not certain why)
    11.  At some point - STOP your trouble 
    shooting efforts and concentrate on making the selected airfield.  Land 
    downwind if need be (depends of course on how much wind)
    12.  Accomplish your pretouch down check 
    list (gear down!,   fuel selector off, master switch off before 
    touch down)
     
    13. At all times "FLY THE 
    AIRCRAFT"!!!
     
    I'm sure others can add to the 
    list
     
    Ed
     
    
      ----- Original Message 
      -----
      
      
      Sent: 
      Friday, May 12, 2006 9:10 PM
      Subject: 
      [FlyRotary] Emergency Checklist
      
      
      You’ve got Tracy’s EC2 and 
      EM2. You’re flying along and the engine suddenly quits. After you 
      establish glide, think about which way to head for possible landing – 
      What’s the first thing you do? Second thing?
      
 
      Electrical still 
      on
      
 
      Possible 
      failures:
      Fuel 
      pump
      ECU
      One set of injectors 
      out
      Fuel supply interrupted 
      (broken/plugged)
      MAP sensor line broken 
      (Would engine stop, or just get very rich?)
      ????
      
 
      I think:  turn on 
      backup pump and switch to controller B.  Check for fuel pressure, if 
      not, set up for landing.  If so, try restart.  No start, turn 
      off one set of injectors.  Still no start; switch to other set. Then 
      ??
      
 
      Anyway, just thinking out 
      loud.  It would be helpful to see emergency checklists regarding 
      engine issues from some of you guys flying.  
      Tracy, you’re first (well, you 
      can decline). And maybe one of you other guys who has also chosen not to 
      fly through the prop wash (Can’t see whether prop turns or 
      not).
      
 
      Thanks,
      
 
      Al