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Ed Anderson
Joined: 10 Jan 2006 Posts: 475
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Posted: Wed Jun 03, 2009 11:55 am Post subject: Essential Incident - Almost (Long) |
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It was suggested by one of the aeroelectric list members, Sam Hoskins, that the following report of an incident I had on a recent trip be posted to the AeroElectric list for obvious reasons – once you read it.
I have an all-electric Rv-6A with over 10 years and close to 500 hours on it. I based the electrical system roughly one of Bob’s excellent designs. It initially had one alternator and two batteries, but removed the second battery approx 5 years ago – but, I did make one modification to the design that I almost had cause to regret.
So needless to say, but I will, responsibility for design and incident is totally mine.
But, to get on with the tale
One the way to Texas I had an incident that ended up in with me and aircraft making a 7 mile engine-out glide into Craig Field (Selma, Alabama). NO! It was not fault of the engine or even the subsystems. But, the complete answer is not provided until after my litany of the conditions and symptoms – can you figure it out?
I took off on Thursday (28 May 2009) AM from North Carolina planning on stopping in Mississippi to join up with two friends. After spending the night there, we all three would then head for Texas. But, the weather (as you are aware) has been laying over the southeast for days with rain and more rain – but I launched into it anyway as past Atlanta, GA things were forecast to improve..
Other than dodging lines of clouds and a bit of scud running, but not much, I landed at Alexandria City to the southwest of Atlanta, GA to take on fuel. I then climbed back in and fire it up and took off.
I noticed that during climb-out the engine would occasionally miss and thought the fuel might have had a bit of water in it, but was not really concerned. So I fly on for approx another 45 minutes and had just passed Selma, Alabama and old Craig Air Force base, and turned west toward Mississippi, when more symptoms began to occur.
It started to act like a case of SAG (fouled spark plugs) where the rpm will drop a bit – not dangerous - just nerve racking. But, shortly things began to go beyond the SAG symptoms, so I though I might have an injector problem (like one sticking open or not opening at all). Since our injectors are in pairs, I tried turning one pair off figuring if things got better, then that pair might have a bad injector.
So I turned off one pair and sure enough the symptoms abated a bit (more on this later) so I figured I had a bad injector in that pair. To be certain I turned this “bad” pair back on and turn off the “good” pair expecting the symptoms to really get bad as I would now be running on only the “bad” pair – much to my surprise when I turned off the “good” pair – the symptoms also abated. So that indicated it was not an injector problem – but what?
About this time, I decided to turn the aircraft back around toward Craig Field and dodging clouds headed back with the engine progressively getting worst. It appeared to be a fuel problem (and while that is ultimately the subsystem affected - it was not the root cause). The fuel pressure was ranging from zero to 80 psi, other electrical things were also misbehaving. I check the voltmeter thinking perhaps the alternator had died – but it showed 14 volts. So back to the fuel system.
Finally, the engine just stops with the prop standing still - like a hood ornament, I’m at around 4500-5000 MSL at this point having lost some altitude dodging a cloud (good old GPS just kept pointing to Craig Field). At that time I am 6-7 miles out from Craig Field at 4500 msl with a stopped prop, a crippled seat cushion and a dry mouth. Yes, I’ve been there before, but I don’t think you ever get “use” to it. I recalled thinking –“… things just can’t get worst…” when they very shortly and suddenly - did.
I keyed the radio and made a call to Craig Field at 4 miles on the GPS but before I could get their reply, I heard a “CLANK” (without the engine running you can hear things like that) like a relay springing open (it was) and the entire panel goes dead!!!! No radio, no engine instruments, not even a stinking LED was lit – only the battery powered GPS. Can you spell “total electrical failure?” Talk about a lonely feeling – amazing how comforting having lights on and radio – you could almost convince yourself this was just a practice engine-out landing, but not when the panel goes dark. No engine gauges, no radio, nada!
Well not being one inclined to panic (but I seriously considered it for a moment {:>)), I continued toward Craig field – I mean like there were lots of other alternatives. Well Once again I found myself in the “fortunate position” of being too high, too much altitude. So I put in 40 degs of flaps to steepen my rate of descent. But, then I decided this time that rather than do the 360 I had done on a previous Incident to lose “excessive” altitude, I would try to glide - a more or less - regular traffic pattern.
However, I neglected to remember to retract the flaps. So I found myself on the downwind around mid-field at pattern altitude (which felt normal) until I suddenly realized that you CAN NOT maintain that pattern altitude without an engine!!! (and particularly with 40 deg of flaps deployed – flaps and trim are manual) Duh!
I knew I could never make it to the far end of the runway before turning base (toward the runway) and I was losing altitude at the rate of 400-500 fpm, so I started my turn immediately. To make matters a bit worst - I had been paralleling the runway on the downwind leg a bit too close in – must have been the comforting feeling of being close to safety. This position naturally required a tighter turn and as I turned I saw I was likely to overshoot the runway and land in the grass. So I though I need to steepen this turn further (Yep! COFFIN CORNER was calling), but fortunately glanced at my airspeed indicator - to see it only registering 80 MPH and my rate of descent (normally 400-500 feet per minute) up to over 1000 feet per minute. The seat cushion suddenly vanished from this universe.
But the REAL danger in this situation, as you all know, is your airspeed gets low, you are in a steep bank which greatly raises the stall speed - meaning at 80 mph you are close to a stall in a steep turn while your are not in straight and level. So I immediately straighten out of the turn – the little voice saying “better to land in the grass than get their concrete runway all messed up”. So the immediate danger of a stall was adverted, but I was still pointed toward the ground with a sink rate twice as high as normal (and I’ve manage a few hard landings even with a normal sink rate). Fortunately, the runway was now under my nose rather than grass.
The hardest thing to do when you are sinking at a 1000 fpm a couple hundred feet above the ground (with your nose already pointed at the ground) is to push the stick forward steeping the dive even more. But, I manage to do that and picked enough air speed and energy to flair to a nice touch down – not even a bump. I’ve always been amazed at what total concentration does to improve you landing {:>).
Rolled to the end of the runway and had energy to roll off onto the taxiway. Got out, check under the aircraft for any evidence of leaks and started pulling the aircraft toward the far –off – hangar which had an airplane parked in front of it. A nice looking young woman comes riding a bicycle out to meet me. Hopped off and holding out her hand said “Hi I’m Angie, looks like we’ll be spending time together” – so things were starting to look up {:>)
So pulled the aircraft in to the hangar where the mechanic came over and ask what the problem was. Well, I looked at the volt meter and it said the battery was dead. Mechanic put on a battery charger and announced “Yep! The battery is dead”. So we both concluded that the alternator must have failed and not being able to replenish the drain on the battery by all the electrical systems such as fuel pumps, injectors, ignition coils, etc had drained the battery.
However, there were a few problems with the analysis of a failed alternator. First, the low voltage warning light never came on to warn of an alternator problem, 2nd I never notice the voltmeter showing anything other than what it should for alternator voltage – like around 14 volts. While checking the voltage after the Mechanic had charged the battery, I noticed down below that the “essential bus” switch was in the battery rather than the alternator position, so flicked it back to the alternator position figuring I must have accidentally kicked it while getting to some stuff in the baggage compartment of my RV-6A.
It was getting late and being a bit tired not to mention stressed, I needed to get a rental car and a motel for the night. Did that, eat dinner and went to bed after sitting down and drawing out a problem tree with the entire major elements of the electrical system.
So next morning I show up at the hangar early and met Ben, the mechanic, the battery had received a charge of only 45 minutes the evening before, So I suggested we charged it for another hour and try to start the aircraft. Ben suggested a real stress test of the battery and NOT charge it anymore. Made sense, so we rolled the aircraft out of the hangar. I hopped in, threw a half dozen switches and punched the starter button. The engine started on the first prop blade rotation – so the battery was clearly OK. The engine is humming like a top. So I looked over at the voltmeter expecting it to show only around 12.8 volts instead of the 14 volts a functioning alternator would produce. Much to both my and Ben’s surprise the alternator voltage read 14 volts. We loaded the alternator by turning on the both l00 watt landing lights, all fuel pumps, the pitot heat, etc. The alternator voltage only drops perhaps 0.4 volts clearly indicating the alternator could carry the load and was OK.
So here I am – battery is OK, alternator is OK – engine is purring normally, so clearly this was all a figment of my deteriorating brain cells. I loaded up the aircraft and launched to do a few circuits of the airport – I did so and all was operating normally and so I radio them I was head onward to Texas. While flying (with my only functional eyeball on the voltmeter), my mind could not let go of the problem and finally the light bulb came on.
The essential bus switch had (for my entire 10 + years of flying)always been in the alternator position. The purpose of this switch is, of course, to isolate the battery from the alternator should the alternator fail - to prevent an alternator problem from draining the battery. So in event of an alternator problem, you move the switch from alternator to battery. Its call the essential bus because you only have the essential things drawing from the battery so you wont’ drain it as quickly. The idea is to give you time (generally around 30 minutes) to find a safe place to land in case of alternator failure.
Well, at some point I had either (not paying attention) turned the switch to battery thinking I was turning the voltmeter switch to battery(more on that below) - or accidentally had move the switch from alternator to battery without noticing it by kicking it, etc. However, it was sort of protected in its position from accidental activation. It must have happened during refueling – as I got approx 45 minutes down the road on the battery after take off before quality battery time started to deteriorate. As the battery voltage fell due to the load (and no alternator link to replenish it), electrical things (mainly computers first) started acting up until they could not longer run the engine. The injectors would not open fully, etc. Then as the voltage level further decreased, the master relay which the battery held closed and which connected the (fully functional) alternator to the rest of the electrical system - opened up and removed ALL power from the electrical system. So no radio, no gauges, etc.
Oh, another little factor that may have contributed, the voltmeter has a tiny toggle switch by it marked ALT BAT1 BAT2 for checking alternator battery 1 and battery 2 (which I no longer fly with) voltages. Down below It a couple of inches and off to the right is the essential bus normal size toggle switch – also marked ALT BAT1 BAT1. I normally never touch it and don’t even think about it. But I could have reached for the voltmeter toggle thinking to check my battery voltage (which I do as a regular thing) and perhaps distracted by something reached a bit further down and instead moved the essential bus switch from Alternator to Battery causing this entire event. I know that I did not consciously do it. So it is either accidental or absence minded activation - either way ends with the same results {:>)
Now it became clear why it didn’t matter which pair of fuel injectors I turned off – turning off either pair improved the situation because it slightly reduced the electrical load by a few amps – and the engine ran slightly better for a few moments. The same thing had happened when turning off one of the EFI fuel pumps – but what threw me was the alternator voltage continued to be normal during this.
After I knew the cause (switch in wrong position), I decided the problem was fixed so no reason to return to NC, and I just continued on to Texas.
I know some of you may think that removing my second battery was a mistake – but, consider this, having another battery could have meant I would have been much further from a suitable airfield before they both went south. On the other hand, it might have caused me to at least think to throw the essential bus switch to the second battery and have the Light bulb come on. Who really knows. But, I have in mind a simply addition to my electrical circuit that should help in the future.
I do want to state that this time when the problems started I DID switch fuel tanks – but naturally it had no effect because this time it turned out, it was not a fuel problem – not the root cause at least.
So what are the lessons learned:
- Put EVERY critical switch on your before-takeoff Check list
- Perhaps put a guard around such critical switches to force conscious activation
- Don’t (hard not to) get overly focused on what you think is the problem – consider other possibilities. I thought it was a fuel problem (I even switched fuel tanks this time) – it turned out to be electrical in its root cause.
- While the fuel pressure was jumping all over the place and the EGT was erratic and engine surging strongly indicating a fuel problem – the ultimate cause was electrical. Once the voltage got below a certain point the EC2 computer was still trying to pull the injectors open, but with the voltage so low it could not do it properly.
- When the battery voltage dropped below a certain point, the master relay released and removed the alternator from the electrical system and the panel went dark – even though the alternator was still working
- Immediately turn to the nearest airfield when serious problems occur - THEN work on fixing them. I only delayed for perhaps 2-3 minutes, but that could have made a difference.
- Watch out for Coffin Corner turn when turning base to final – airspeed really bleeds off fast with no engine pulling you along (and especially with flaps deployed!)
- IF you change your mind about landing approach type - remember to reconfigure your aircraft for the last decision – I had left my flaps deployed when I should have remembered to retracted them. Did that help prevent a Coffin Corner stall and spin or would it have put me closer to it?
- You must increase airspeed over the wing to get the sufficient energy to over come a high sink rate. Pulling back on the stick when the ground is staring you in the face is the natural reaction – but, pushing forward to lower the nose is the correct action – providing of course you have sufficient altitude!
- Battery life – I had a two year old 680 odyssey battery which I maintain a trickle charge on whenever I’m not flying. With two EFI fuel pumps, boost pump, injectors, coils, EC2 and radio and just having started the engine before take off – this battery lasted 55 minutes. Well, the last 5 minutes were not quality battery time. So in my case, 30 minutes appears to be a very realistic battery life. In fact, had I turned off one EFI pump and the boost pump would have gained a few more miles. But, if I had recognized the need to turn them off at that time (I normally turn them off at cruise altitude), then I would have known how to “fix” the problem.
- I’ve decided to add a Schokkty diode between my essential bus and the alternator – so that as long as the alternator is producing sufficient voltage, then the battery will be getting some charge to replace the drain. I’ve also decided to make that switch position a check-list item.
So what it boils down to – if I had recognized early on that it was an electrical problem and not focused so much on the fuel system, I may have noticed the essential bus switch in the wrong position. Force yourself to examine other possible causes (easy to say – harder to do).
NEVER, NEVER forget that flying the airplane is the first and only priority in this type of situation
NEVER, NEVER forget that saving your butt is the ultimately end-all priority. When I decided that landing on the grass was preferable to putting a hole in their concrete – I may have made a life-saving decision.
So that’s my story and I’m sticking to it.
Fly safe, guys!!
Ed
Ed Anderson
Rv-6A N494BW Rotary Powered
Matthews, NC
eanderson(at)carolina.rr.com
http://www.andersonee.com
http://www.dmack.net/mazda/index.html
http://www.flyrotary.com/
http://members.cox.net/rogersda/rotary/configs.htm#N494BW
[url=http://www.dmack.net/mazda/index.html][/url]
[quote][b]
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_________________ Ed Anderson
Rv-6A N494BW Rotary Powered
Matthews, NC
eanderson@carolina.rr.com |
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Sam
Joined: 18 May 2008 Posts: 135
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Posted: Wed Jun 03, 2009 12:14 pm Post subject: Essential Incident - Almost (Long) |
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Ed - great story. Just out of curiosity, where is the essential bus switch
located? Is it plainly in your field of vision or do you have to turn your
head to see it?
Cockpit ergonomics are a huge challenge.
Sam Hoskins
www.samhoskins.blogspot.com
On Wed, Jun 3, 2009 at 2:53 PM, Ed Anderson <eanderson(at)carolina.rr.com>wrote:
[quote] It was suggested by one of the aeroelectric list members, Sam Hoskins,
that the following report of an incident I had on a recent trip be posted
to the AeroElectric list for obvious reasons – once you read it.
I have an all-electric Rv-6A with over 10 years and close to 500 hours on
it. I based the electrical system roughly one of Bob’s excellent designs.
It initially had one alternator and two batteries, but removed the second
battery approx 5 years ago – but, I did make one modification to the design
that I almost had cause to regret.
So needless to say, but I will, responsibility for design and incident is
totally mine.
But, to get on with the tale
One the way to Texas I had an incident that ended up in with me and
aircraft making a 7 mile engine-out glide into Craig Field (Selma,
Alabama). NO! It was not fault of the engine or even the subsystems. But,
the complete answer is not provided until after my litany of the conditions
and symptoms – can you figure it out?
I took off on Thursday (28 May 2009) AM from North Carolina planning on
stopping in Mississippi to join up with two friends. After spending the
night there, we all three would then head for Texas. But, the weather (as
you are aware) has been laying over the southeast for days with rain and
more rain – but I launched into it anyway as past Atlanta, GA things were
forecast to improve..
Other than dodging lines of clouds and a bit of scud running, but not much,
I landed at Alexandria City to the southwest of Atlanta, GA to take on
fuel. I then climbed back in and fire it up and took off.
I noticed that during climb-out the engine would occasionally miss and
thought the fuel might have had a bit of water in it, but was not really
concerned. So I fly on for approx another 45 minutes and had just passed
Selma, Alabama and old Craig Air Force base, and turned west toward
Mississippi, when more symptoms began to occur.
It started to act like a case of SAG (fouled spark plugs) where the rpm
will drop a bit – not dangerous - just nerve racking. But, shortly things
began to go beyond the SAG symptoms, so I though I might have an injector
problem (like one sticking open or not opening at all). Since our injectors
are in pairs, I tried turning one pair off figuring if things got better,
then that pair might have a bad injector.
So I turned off one pair and sure enough the symptoms abated a bit (more on
this later) so I figured I had a bad injector in that pair. To be certain I
turned this “bad” pair back on and turn off the “good” pair expecting the
symptoms to really get bad as I would now be running on only the “bad” pair
– much to my surprise when I turned off the “good” pair – the symptoms also
abated. So that indicated it was not an injector problem – but what?
About this time, I decided to turn the aircraft back around toward Craig
Field and dodging clouds headed back with the engine progressively getting
worst. It appeared to be a fuel problem (and while that is ultimately the
subsystem affected - it was not the root cause). The fuel pressure was
ranging from zero to 80 psi, other electrical things were also misbehaving.
I check the voltmeter thinking perhaps the alternator had died – but it
showed 14 volts. So back to the fuel system.
Finally, the engine just stops with the prop standing still - like a hood
ornament, I’m at around 4500-5000 MSL at this point having lost some
altitude dodging a cloud (good old GPS just kept pointing to Craig Field)
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_________________ Sam Hoskins
www.samhoskins.blogspot.com |
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mprather(at)spro.net Guest
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Posted: Wed Jun 03, 2009 12:46 pm Post subject: Essential Incident - Almost (Long) |
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Great writeup Ed. Thanks for sharing it with the list.
Regards,
Matt-
Quote: | It was suggested by one of the aeroelectric list members, Sam Hoskins,
that
the following report of an incident I had on a recent trip be posted to
the
AeroElectric list for obvious reasons - once you read it.
I have an all-electric Rv-6A with over 10 years and close to 500 hours on
it. I based the electrical system roughly one of Bob's excellent designs.
It initially had one alternator and two batteries, but removed the second
battery approx 5 years ago - but, I did make one modification to the
design
that I almost had cause to regret.
So needless to say, but I will, responsibility for design and incident
is
totally mine.
But, to get on with the tale
One the way to Texas I had an incident that ended up in with me and
aircraft
making a 7 mile engine-out glide into Craig Field (Selma, Alabama). NO!
It
was not fault of the engine or even the subsystems. But, the complete
answer is not provided until after my litany of the conditions and
symptoms
- can you figure it out?
I took off on Thursday (28 May 2009) AM from North Carolina planning on
stopping in Mississippi to join up with two friends. After spending the
night there, we all three would then head for Texas. But, the weather (as
you are aware) has been laying over the southeast for days with rain and
more rain - but I launched into it anyway as past Atlanta, GA things were
forecast to improve..
Other than dodging lines of clouds and a bit of scud running, but not
much,
I landed at Alexandria City to the southwest of Atlanta, GA to take on
fuel.
I then climbed back in and fire it up and took off.
I noticed that during climb-out the engine would occasionally miss and
thought the fuel might have had a bit of water in it, but was not really
concerned. So I fly on for approx another 45 minutes and had just passed
Selma, Alabama and old Craig Air Force base, and turned west toward
Mississippi, when more symptoms began to occur.
It started to act like a case of SAG (fouled spark plugs) where the rpm
will
drop a bit - not dangerous - just nerve racking. But, shortly things
began
to go beyond the SAG symptoms, so I though I might have an injector
problem
(like one sticking open or not opening at all). Since our injectors are
in
pairs, I tried turning one pair off figuring if things got better, then
that pair might have a bad injector.
So I turned off one pair and sure enough the symptoms abated a bit (more
on
this later) so I figured I had a bad injector in that pair. To be certain
I
turned this "bad" pair back on and turn off the "good" pair expecting the
symptoms to really get bad as I would now be running on only the "bad"
pair
- much to my surprise when I turned off the "good" pair - the symptoms
also
abated. So that indicated it was not an injector problem - but what?
About this time, I decided to turn the aircraft back around toward Craig
Field and dodging clouds headed back with the engine progressively getting
worst. It appeared to be a fuel problem (and while that is ultimately the
subsystem affected - it was not the root cause). The fuel pressure was
ranging from zero to 80 psi, other electrical things were also
misbehaving.
I check the voltmeter thinking perhaps the alternator had died - but it
showed 14 volts. So back to the fuel system.
Finally, the engine just stops with the prop standing still - like a
hood
ornament, I'm at around 4500-5000 MSL at this point having lost some
altitude dodging a cloud (good old GPS just kept pointing to Craig Field).
At that time I am 6-7 miles out from Craig Field at 4500 msl with a
stopped
prop, a crippled seat cushion and a dry mouth. Yes, I've been there
before,
but I don't think you ever get "use" to it. I recalled thinking -".
things
just can't get worst." when they very shortly and suddenly - did.
I keyed the radio and made a call to Craig Field at 4 miles on the GPS but
before I could get their reply, I heard a "CLANK" (without the engine
running you can hear things like that) like a relay springing open (it
was)
and the entire panel goes dead!!!! No radio, no engine instruments, not
even a stinking LED was lit - only the battery powered GPS. Can you spell
"total electrical failure?" Talk about a lonely feeling - amazing how
comforting having lights on and radio - you could almost convince yourself
this was just a practice engine-out landing, but not when the panel goes
dark. No engine gauges, no radio, nada!
Well not being one inclined to panic (but I seriously considered it for a
moment {:>)), I continued toward Craig field - I mean like there were lots
of other alternatives. Well Once again I found myself in the "fortunate
position" of being too high, too much altitude. So I put in 40 degs of
flaps
to steepen my rate of descent. But, then I decided this time that rather
than do the 360 I had done on a previous Incident to lose "excessive"
altitude, I would try to glide - a more or less - regular traffic pattern.
However, I neglected to remember to retract the flaps. So I found myself
on
the downwind around mid-field at pattern altitude (which felt normal)
until
I suddenly realized that you CAN NOT maintain that pattern altitude
without
an engine!!! (and particularly with 40 deg of flaps deployed - flaps and
trim are manual) Duh!
I knew I could never make it to the far end of the runway before turning
base (toward the runway) and I was losing altitude at the rate of 400-500
fpm, so I started my turn immediately. To make matters a bit worst - I
had
been paralleling the runway on the downwind leg a bit too close in - must
have been the comforting feeling of being close to safety. This position
naturally required a tighter turn and as I turned I saw I was likely to
overshoot the runway and land in the grass. So I though I need to steepen
this turn further (Yep! COFFIN CORNER was calling), but fortunately
glanced
at my airspeed indicator - to see it only registering 80 MPH and my rate
of
descent (normally 400-500 feet per minute) up to over 1000 feet per
minute.
The seat cushion suddenly vanished from this universe.
But the REAL danger in this situation, as you all know, is your airspeed
gets low, you are in a steep bank which greatly raises the stall speed -
meaning at 80 mph you are close to a stall in a steep turn while your are
not in straight and level. So I immediately straighten out of the turn -
the little voice saying "better to land in the grass than get their
concrete
runway all messed up". So the immediate danger of a stall was adverted,
but
I was still pointed toward the ground with a sink rate twice as high as
normal (and I've manage a few hard landings even with a normal sink rate).
Fortunately, the runway was now under my nose rather than grass.
The hardest thing to do when you are sinking at a 1000 fpm a couple
hundred
feet above the ground (with your nose already pointed at the ground) is to
push the stick forward steeping the dive even more. But, I manage to do
that and picked enough air speed and energy to flair to a nice touch down
-
not even a bump. I've always been amazed at what total concentration does
to improve you landing {:>).
Rolled to the end of the runway and had energy to roll off onto the
taxiway.
Got out, check under the aircraft for any evidence of leaks and started
pulling the aircraft toward the far -off - hangar which had an airplane
parked in front of it. A nice looking young woman comes riding a bicycle
out to meet me. Hopped off and holding out her hand said "Hi I'm Angie,
looks like we'll be spending time together" - so things were starting to
look up {:>)
So pulled the aircraft in to the hangar where the mechanic came over and
ask
what the problem was. Well, I looked at the volt meter and it said the
battery was dead. Mechanic put on a battery charger and announced "Yep!
The
battery is dead". So we both concluded that the alternator must have
failed
and not being able to replenish the drain on the battery by all the
electrical systems such as fuel pumps, injectors, ignition coils, etc had
drained the battery.
However, there were a few problems with the analysis of a failed
alternator.
First, the low voltage warning light never came on to warn of an
alternator
problem, 2nd I never notice the voltmeter showing anything other than what
it should for alternator voltage - like around 14 volts. While checking
the
voltage after the Mechanic had charged the battery, I noticed down below
that the "essential bus" switch was in the battery rather than the
alternator position, so flicked it back to the alternator position
figuring
I must have accidentally kicked it while getting to some stuff in the
baggage compartment of my RV-6A.
It was getting late and being a bit tired not to mention stressed, I
needed
to get a rental car and a motel for the night. Did that, eat dinner and
went to bed after sitting down and drawing out a problem tree with the
entire major elements of the electrical system.
So next morning I show up at the hangar early and met Ben, the mechanic,
the
battery had received a charge of only 45 minutes the evening before, So I
suggested we charged it for another hour and try to start the aircraft.
Ben
suggested a real stress test of the battery and NOT charge it anymore.
Made
sense, so we rolled the aircraft out of the hangar. I hopped in, threw a
half dozen switches and punched the starter button. The engine started on
the first prop blade rotation - so the battery was clearly OK. The engine
is
humming like a top. So I looked over at the voltmeter expecting it to
show only around 12.8 volts instead of the 14 volts a functioning
alternator
would produce. Much to both my and Ben's surprise the alternator voltage
read 14 volts. We loaded the alternator by turning on the both l00 watt
landing lights, all fuel pumps, the pitot heat, etc. The alternator
voltage
only drops perhaps 0.4 volts clearly indicating the alternator could carry
the load and was OK.
So here I am - battery is OK, alternator is OK - engine is purring
normally,
so clearly this was all a figment of my deteriorating brain cells. I
loaded
up the aircraft and launched to do a few circuits of the airport - I did
so
and all was operating normally and so I radio them I was head onward to
Texas. While flying (with my only functional eyeball on the voltmeter),
my
mind could not let go of the problem and finally the light bulb came on.
The essential bus switch had (for my entire 10 + years of flying)always
been
in the alternator position. The purpose of this switch is, of course, to
isolate the battery from the alternator should the alternator fail - to
prevent an alternator problem from draining the battery. So in event of
an
alternator problem, you move the switch from alternator to battery. Its
call the essential bus because you only have the essential things drawing
from the battery so you wont' drain it as quickly. The idea is to give
you
time (generally around 30 minutes) to find a safe place to land in case of
alternator failure.
Well, at some point I had either (not paying attention) turned the switch
to
battery thinking I was turning the voltmeter switch to battery(more on
that
below) - or accidentally had move the switch from alternator to battery
without noticing it by kicking it, etc. However, it was sort of protected
in its position from accidental activation. It must have happened during
refueling - as I got approx 45 minutes down the road on the battery after
take off before quality battery time started to deteriorate. As the
battery
voltage fell due to the load (and no alternator link to replenish it),
electrical things (mainly computers first) started acting up until they
could not longer run the engine. The injectors would not open fully, etc.
Then as the voltage level further decreased, the master relay which the
battery held closed and which connected the (fully functional) alternator
to
the rest of the electrical system - opened up and removed ALL power from
the
electrical system. So no radio, no gauges, etc.
Oh, another little factor that may have contributed, the voltmeter has a
tiny toggle switch by it marked ALT BAT1 BAT2 for checking alternator
battery 1 and battery 2 (which I no longer fly with) voltages. Down below
It a couple of inches and off to the right is the essential bus normal
size
toggle switch - also marked ALT BAT1 BAT1. I normally never touch it and
don't even think about it. But I could have reached for the voltmeter
toggle thinking to check my battery voltage (which I do as a regular
thing)
and perhaps distracted by something reached a bit further down and instead
moved the essential bus switch from Alternator to Battery causing this
entire event. I know that I did not consciously do it. So it is either
accidental or absence minded activation - either way ends with the same
results {:>)
Now it became clear why it didn't matter which pair of fuel injectors I
turned off - turning off either pair improved the situation because it
slightly reduced the electrical load by a few amps - and the engine ran
slightly better for a few moments. The same thing had happened when
turning
off one of the EFI fuel pumps - but what threw me was the alternator
voltage
continued to be normal during this.
After I knew the cause (switch in wrong position), I decided the problem
was
fixed so no reason to return to NC, and I just continued on to Texas.
I know some of you may think that removing my second battery was a mistake
-
but, consider this, having another battery could have meant I would have
been much further from a suitable airfield before they both went south.
On
the other hand, it might have caused me to at least think to throw the
essential bus switch to the second battery and have the Light bulb come
on.
Who really knows. But, I have in mind a simply addition to my electrical
circuit that should help in the future.
I do want to state that this time when the problems started I DID switch
fuel tanks - but naturally it had no effect because this time it turned
out,
it was not a fuel problem - not the root cause at least.
So what are the lessons learned:
1. Put EVERY critical switch on your before-takeoff Check list
2. Perhaps put a guard around such critical switches to force conscious
activation
3. Don't (hard not to) get overly focused on what you think is the
problem - consider other possibilities. I thought it was a fuel problem
(I
even switched fuel tanks this time) - it turned out to be electrical in
its
root cause.
4. While the fuel pressure was jumping all over the place and the EGT
was erratic and engine surging strongly indicating a fuel problem - the
ultimate cause was electrical. Once the voltage got below a certain point
the EC2 computer was still trying to pull the injectors open, but with
the
voltage so low it could not do it properly.
5. When the battery voltage dropped below a certain point, the master
relay released and removed the alternator from the electrical system and
the
panel went dark - even though the alternator was still working
6. Immediately turn to the nearest airfield when serious problems occur
- THEN work on fixing them. I only delayed for perhaps 2-3 minutes, but
that could have made a difference.
7. Watch out for Coffin Corner turn when turning base to final -
airspeed really bleeds off fast with no engine pulling you along (and
especially with flaps deployed!)
8. IF you change your mind about landing approach type - remember to
reconfigure your aircraft for the last decision - I had left my flaps
deployed when I should have remembered to retracted them. Did that help
prevent a Coffin Corner stall and spin or would it have put me closer to
it?
9. You must increase airspeed over the wing to get the sufficient
energy to over come a high sink rate. Pulling back on the stick when the
ground is staring you in the face is the natural reaction - but, pushing
forward to lower the nose is the correct action - providing of course you
have sufficient altitude!
10. Battery life - I had a two year old 680 odyssey battery which I
maintain a trickle charge on whenever I'm not flying. With two EFI fuel
pumps, boost pump, injectors, coils, EC2 and radio and just having started
the engine before take off - this battery lasted 55 minutes. Well, the
last
5 minutes were not quality battery time. So in my case, 30 minutes
appears
to be a very realistic battery life. In fact, had I turned off one EFI
pump
and the boost pump would have gained a few more miles. But, if I had
recognized the need to turn them off at that time (I normally turn them
off
at cruise altitude), then I would have known how to "fix" the problem.
11. I've decided to add a Schokkty diode between my essential bus and
the alternator - so that as long as the alternator is producing sufficient
voltage, then the battery will be getting some charge to replace the
drain.
I've also decided to make that switch position a check-list item.
So what it boils down to - if I had recognized early on that it was an
electrical problem and not focused so much on the fuel system, I may have
noticed the essential bus switch in the wrong position. Force yourself to
examine other possible causes (easy to say - harder to do).
NEVER, NEVER forget that flying the airplane is the first and only
priority
in this type of situation
NEVER, NEVER forget that saving your butt is the ultimately end-all
priority. When I decided that landing on the grass was preferable to
putting a hole in their concrete - I may have made a life-saving
decision.
So that's my story and I'm sticking to it.
Fly safe, guys!!
Ed
Ed Anderson
Rv-6A N494BW Rotary Powered
Matthews, NC
eanderson(at)carolina.rr.com
<http://www.andersonee.com> http://www.andersonee.com
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khorton01(at)rogers.com Guest
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Posted: Wed Jun 03, 2009 1:11 pm Post subject: Essential Incident - Almost (Long) |
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Ed,
Congrats for keeping your cool, and flying the airplane to a safe
landing. And thanks for sharing the story, so we can all learn from
your incident.
I fully agree that checklists are important. If your electrical
system design assumes that the electrical system will be in a
particular configuration for flight, then you need a checklist that
ensures this is true. And you need to religiously do every step on
that checklist before take-off.
It is also useful to have well thought out checklists for engine
failure, engine rough running, etc. For example, a well thought rough
running engine checklist would include all steps necessary to check
voltage on whatever bus(s) your engine needs.
One thing that puzzles me about your electrical system design - it
seems that your engine needs power from the Essential Bus. But it
seems like your active low voltage warning is looking at some other
bus. Why not hook the low voltage warning up the the one bus that is
really important - i.e. the Essential Bus?
Kevin Horton
On 3-Jun-09, at 15:53 , Ed Anderson wrote:
Quote: | It was suggested by one of the aeroelectric list members, Sam
Hoskins, that the following report of an incident I had on a recent
trip be posted to the AeroElectric list for obvious reasons – once
you read it.
I have an all-electric Rv-6A with over 10 years and close to 500
hours on it. I based the electrical system roughly one of Bob’s
excellent designs. It initially had one alternator and two
batteries, but removed the second battery approx 5 years ago – but,
I did make one modification to the design that I almost had cause
to regret.
So needless to say, but I will, responsibility for design and
incident is totally mine.
But, to get on with the tale
One the way to Texas I had an incident that ended up in with me and
aircraft making a 7 mile engine-out glide into Craig Field (Selma,
Alabama). NO! It was not fault of the engine or even the
subsystems. But, the complete answer is not provided until after my
litany of the conditions and symptoms – can you figure it out?
I took off on Thursday (28 May 2009) AM from North Carolina planning
on stopping in Mississippi to join up with two friends. After
spending the night there, we all three would then head for Texas.
But, the weather (as you are aware) has been laying over the
southeast for days with rain and more rain – but I launched into it
anyway as past Atlanta, GA things were forecast to improve..
Other than dodging lines of clouds and a bit of scud running, but
not much, I landed at Alexandria City to the southwest of Atlanta,
GA to take on fuel. I then climbed back in and fire it up and took
off.
I noticed that during climb-out the engine would occasionally miss
and thought the fuel might have had a bit of water in it, but was
not really concerned. So I fly on for approx another 45 minutes and
had just passed Selma, Alabama and old Craig Air Force base, and
turned west toward Mississippi, when more symptoms began to occur.
It started to act like a case of SAG (fouled spark plugs) where the
rpm will drop a bit – not dangerous - just nerve racking. But,
shortly things began to go beyond the SAG symptoms, so I though I
might have an injector problem (like one sticking open or not
opening at all). Since our injectors are in pairs, I tried turning
one pair off figuring if things got better, then that pair might
have a bad injector.
So I turned off one pair and sure enough the symptoms abated a bit
(more on this later) so I figured I had a bad injector in that
pair. To be certain I turned this “bad” pair back on and turn off
the “good” pair expecting the symptoms to really get bad as I would
now be running on only the “bad” pair – much to my surprise when I
turned off the “good” pair – the symptoms also abated. So that
indicated it was not an injector problem – but what?
About this time, I decided to turn the aircraft back around toward
Craig Field and dodging clouds headed back with the engine
progressively getting worst. It appeared to be a fuel problem (and
while that is ultimately the subsystem affected - it was not the
root cause). The fuel pressure was ranging from zero to 80 psi,
other electrical things were also misbehaving. I check the
voltmeter thinking perhaps the alternator had died – but it showed
14 volts. So back to the fuel system.
Finally, the engine just stops with the prop standing still - like
a hood ornament, I’m at around 4500-5000 MSL at this point having
lost some altitude dodging a cloud (good old GPS just kept pointing
to Craig Field). At that time I am 6-7 miles out from Craig Field
at 4500 msl with a stopped prop, a crippled seat cushion and a dry
mouth. Yes, I’ve been there before, but I don’t think you ever get
“use” to it. I recalled thinking –“… things just can’t get
worst…” when they very shortly and suddenly - did.
I keyed the radio and made a call to Craig Field at 4 miles on the
GPS but before I could get their reply, I heard a “CLANK” (without
the engine running you can hear things like that) like a relay
springing open (it was) and the entire panel goes dead!!!! No
radio, no engine instruments, not even a stinking LED was lit – only
the battery powered GPS. Can you spell “total electrical failure?”
Talk about a lonely feeling – amazing how comforting having lights
on and radio – you could almost convince yourself this was just a
practice engine-out landing, but not when the panel goes dark. No
engine gauges, no radio, nada!
Well not being one inclined to panic (but I seriously considered it
for a moment {:>)), I continued toward Craig field – I mean like
there were lots of other alternatives. Well Once again I found
myself in the “fortunate position” of being too high, too much
altitude. So I put in 40 degs of flaps to steepen my rate of
descent. But, then I decided this time that rather than do the 360 I
had done on a previous Incident to lose “excessive” altitude, I
would try to glide - a more or less - regular traffic pattern.
However, I neglected to remember to retract the flaps. So I found
myself on the downwind around mid-field at pattern altitude (which
felt normal) until I suddenly realized that you CAN NOT maintain
that pattern altitude without an engine!!! (and particularly with
40 deg of flaps deployed – flaps and trim are manual) Duh!
I knew I could never make it to the far end of the runway before
turning base (toward the runway) and I was losing altitude at the
rate of 400-500 fpm, so I started my turn immediately. To make
matters a bit worst - I had been paralleling the runway on the
downwind leg a bit too close in – must have been the comforting
feeling of being close to safety. This position naturally required
a tighter turn and as I turned I saw I was likely to overshoot the
runway and land in the grass. So I though I need to steepen this
turn further (Yep! COFFIN CORNER was calling), but fortunately
glanced at my airspeed indicator - to see it only registering 80 MPH
and my rate of descent (normally 400-500 feet per minute) up to over
1000 feet per minute. The seat cushion suddenly vanished from this
universe.
But the REAL danger in this situation, as you all know, is your
airspeed gets low, you are in a steep bank which greatly raises the
stall speed - meaning at 80 mph you are close to a stall in a steep
turn while your are not in straight and level. So I immediately
straighten out of the turn – the little voice saying “better to land
in the grass than get their concrete runway all messed up”. So the
immediate danger of a stall was adverted, but I was still pointed
toward the ground with a sink rate twice as high as normal (and I’ve
manage a few hard landings even with a normal sink rate).
Fortunately, the runway was now under my nose rather than grass.
The hardest thing to do when you are sinking at a 1000 fpm a couple
hundred feet above the ground (with your nose already pointed at the
ground) is to push the stick forward steeping the dive even more.
But, I manage to do that and picked enough air speed and energy to
flair to a nice touch down – not even a bump. I’ve always been
amazed at what total concentration does to improve you landing {:>).
Rolled to the end of the runway and had energy to roll off onto the
taxiway. Got out, check under the aircraft for any evidence of
leaks and started pulling the aircraft toward the far –off – hangar
which had an airplane parked in front of it. A nice looking young
woman comes riding a bicycle out to meet me. Hopped off and holding
out her hand said “Hi I’m Angie, looks like we’ll be spending time
together” – so things were starting to look up {:>)
So pulled the aircraft in to the hangar where the mechanic came over
and ask what the problem was. Well, I looked at the volt meter and
it said the battery was dead. Mechanic put on a battery charger and
announced “Yep! The battery is dead”. So we both concluded that the
alternator must have failed and not being able to replenish the
drain on the battery by all the electrical systems such as fuel
pumps, injectors, ignition coils, etc had drained the battery.
However, there were a few problems with the analysis of a failed
alternator. First, the low voltage warning light never came on to
warn of an alternator problem, 2nd I never notice the voltmeter
showing anything other than what it should for alternator voltage –
like around 14 volts. While checking the voltage after the Mechanic
had charged the battery, I noticed down below that the “essential
bus” switch was in the battery rather than the alternator position,
so flicked it back to the alternator position figuring I must have
accidentally kicked it while getting to some stuff in the baggage
compartment of my RV-6A.
It was getting late and being a bit tired not to mention stressed, I
needed to get a rental car and a motel for the night. Did that, eat
dinner and went to bed after sitting down and drawing out a problem
tree with the entire major elements of the electrical system.
So next morning I show up at the hangar early and met Ben, the
mechanic, the battery had received a charge of only 45 minutes the
evening before, So I suggested we charged it for another hour and
try to start the aircraft. Ben suggested a real stress test of the
battery and NOT charge it anymore. Made sense, so we rolled the
aircraft out of the hangar. I hopped in, threw a half dozen
switches and punched the starter button. The engine started on the
first prop blade rotation – so the battery was clearly OK. The
engine is humming like a top. So I looked over at the voltmeter
expecting it to show only around 12.8 volts instead of the 14 volts
a functioning alternator would produce. Much to both my and Ben’s
surprise the alternator voltage read 14 volts. We loaded the
alternator by turning on the both l00 watt landing lights, all fuel
pumps, the pitot heat, etc. The alternator voltage only drops
perhaps 0.4 volts clearly indicating the alternator could carry the
load and was OK.
So here I am – battery is OK, alternator is OK – engine is purring
normally, so clearly this was all a figment of my deteriorating
brain cells. I loaded up the aircraft and launched to do a few
circuits of the airport – I did so and all was operating normally
and so I radio them I was head onward to Texas. While flying (with
my only functional eyeball on the voltmeter), my mind could not let
go of the problem and finally the light bulb came on.
The essential bus switch had (for my entire 10 + years of
flying)always been in the alternator position. The purpose of this
switch is, of course, to isolate the battery from the alternator
should the alternator fail - to prevent an alternator problem from
draining the battery. So in event of an alternator problem, you
move the switch from alternator to battery. Its call the essential
bus because you only have the essential things drawing from the
battery so you wont’ drain it as quickly. The idea is to give you
time (generally around 30 minutes) to find a safe place to land in
case of alternator failure.
Well, at some point I had either (not paying attention) turned the
switch to battery thinking I was turning the voltmeter switch to
battery(more on that below) - or accidentally had move the switch
from alternator to battery without noticing it by kicking it, etc.
However, it was sort of protected in its position from accidental
activation. It must have happened during refueling – as I got approx
45 minutes down the road on the battery after take off before
quality battery time started to deteriorate. As the battery voltage
fell due to the load (and no alternator link to replenish it),
electrical things (mainly computers first) started acting up until
they could not longer run the engine. The injectors would not open
fully, etc. Then as the voltage level further decreased, the master
relay which the battery held closed and which connected the (fully
functional) alternator to the rest of the electrical system - opened
up and removed ALL power from the electrical system. So no radio,
no gauges, etc.
Oh, another little factor that may have contributed, the voltmeter
has a tiny toggle switch by it marked ALT BAT1 BAT2 for checking
alternator battery 1 and battery 2 (which I no longer fly with)
voltages. Down below It a couple of inches and off to the right is
the essential bus normal size toggle switch – also marked ALT BAT1
BAT1. I normally never touch it and don’t even think about it. But
I could have reached for the voltmeter toggle thinking to check my
battery voltage (which I do as a regular thing) and perhaps
distracted by something reached a bit further down and instead moved
the essential bus switch from Alternator to Battery causing this
entire event. I know that I did not consciously do it. So it is
either accidental or absence minded activation - either way ends
with the same results {:>)
Now it became clear why it didn’t matter which pair of fuel
injectors I turned off – turning off either pair improved the
situation because it slightly reduced the electrical load by a few
amps – and the engine ran slightly better for a few moments. The
same thing had happened when turning off one of the EFI fuel pumps –
but what threw me was the alternator voltage continued to be normal
during this.
After I knew the cause (switch in wrong position), I decided the
problem was fixed so no reason to return to NC, and I just continued
on to Texas.
I know some of you may think that removing my second battery was a
mistake – but, consider this, having another battery could have
meant I would have been much further from a suitable airfield before
they both went south. On the other hand, it might have caused me to
at least think to throw the essential bus switch to the second
battery and have the Light bulb come on. Who really knows. But, I
have in mind a simply addition to my electrical circuit that should
help in the future.
I do want to state that this time when the problems started I DID
switch fuel tanks – but naturally it had no effect because this time
it turned out, it was not a fuel problem – not the root cause at
least.
So what are the lessons learned:
• Put EVERY critical switch on your before-takeoff Check list
• Perhaps put a guard around such critical switches to force
conscious activation
• Don’t (hard not to) get overly focused on what you think is the
problem – consider other possibilities. I thought it was a fuel
problem (I even switched fuel tanks this time) – it turned out to be
electrical in its root cause.
• While the fuel pressure was jumping all over the place and the
EGT was erratic and engine surging strongly indicating a fuel
problem – the ultimate cause was electrical. Once the voltage got
below a certain point the EC2 computer was still trying to pull the
injectors open, but with the voltage so low it could not do it
properly.
• When the battery voltage dropped below a certain point, the
master relay released and removed the alternator from the electrical
system and the panel went dark – even though the alternator was
still working
• Immediately turn to the nearest airfield when serious problems
occur - THEN work on fixing them. I only delayed for perhaps 2-3
minutes, but that could have made a difference.
• Watch out for Coffin Corner turn when turning base to final –
airspeed really bleeds off fast with no engine pulling you along
(and especially with flaps deployed!)
• IF you change your mind about landing approach type - remember to
reconfigure your aircraft for the last decision – I had left my
flaps deployed when I should have remembered to retracted them. Did
that help prevent a Coffin Corner stall and spin or would it have
put me closer to it?
• You must increase airspeed over the wing to get the sufficient
energy to over come a high sink rate. Pulling back on the stick
when the ground is staring you in the face is the natural reaction –
but, pushing forward to lower the nose is the correct action –
providing of course you have sufficient altitude!
• Battery life – I had a two year old 680 odyssey battery which I
maintain a trickle charge on whenever I’m not flying. With two EFI
fuel pumps, boost pump, injectors, coils, EC2 and radio and just
having started the engine before take off – this battery lasted 55
minutes. Well, the last 5 minutes were not quality battery time.
So in my case, 30 minutes appears to be a very realistic battery
life. In fact, had I turned off one EFI pump and the boost pump
would have gained a few more miles. But, if I had recognized the
need to turn them off at that time (I normally turn them off at
cruise altitude), then I would have known how to “fix” the problem.
• I’ve decided to add a Schokkty diode between my essential bus and
the alternator – so that as long as the alternator is producing
sufficient voltage, then the battery will be getting some charge to
replace the drain. I’ve also decided to make that switch position a
check-list item.
So what it boils down to – if I had recognized early on that it was
an electrical problem and not focused so much on the fuel system, I
may have noticed the essential bus switch in the wrong position.
Force yourself to examine other possible causes (easy to say –
harder to do).
NEVER, NEVER forget that flying the airplane is the first and only
priority in this type of situation
NEVER, NEVER forget that saving your butt is the ultimately end-all
priority. When I decided that landing on the grass was preferable
to putting a hole in their concrete – I may have made a life-saving
decision.
So that’s my story and I’m sticking to it.
Fly safe, guys!!
Ed
Ed Anderson
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Ed Anderson
Joined: 10 Jan 2006 Posts: 475
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Posted: Wed Jun 03, 2009 4:43 pm Post subject: Essential Incident - Almost (Long) |
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Sam, its just about on the centerline of the panel but down on the bottom. So its actually outside my line of vision looking straight ahead. My voltmeter and its toggle selector is above it approx 3-4” and slightly to the left of it. Both are within reach without stretching.
As I mentioned the essential bus switch has been in the alternator position for the past 10 years of flying and never moved since initial testing back then. Should have had it on my pre-takeoff check list and will.
Ed
Ed Anderson
Rv-6A N494BW Rotary Powered
Matthews, NC
eanderson(at)carolina.rr.com
http://www.andersonee.com
http://www.dmack.net/mazda/index.html
http://www.flyrotary.com/
http://members.cox.net/rogersda/rotary/configs.htm#N494BW
http://www.rotaryaviation.com/Rotorhead%20Truth.htm[/url]
From: owner-aeroelectric-list-server(at)matronics.com [mailto:owner-aeroelectric-list-server(at)matronics.com] On Behalf Of Sam Hoskins
Sent: Wednesday, June 03, 2009 4:12 PM
To: aeroelectric-list(at)matronics.com
Subject: Re: AeroElectric-List: Essential Incident - Almost (Long)
Ed - great story. Just out of curiosity, where is the essential bus switch located? Is it plainly in your field of vision or do you have to turn your head to see it?
Cockpit ergonomics are a huge challenge.
Sam Hoskins
[url=http://www.samhoskins.blogspot.com]www.samhoskins.blogspot.com
On Wed, Jun 3, 2009 at 2:53 PM, Ed Anderson <eanderson(at)carolina.rr.com (eanderson(at)carolina.rr.com)> wrote:
It was suggested by one of the aeroelectric list members, Sam Hoskins, that the following report of an incident I had on a recent trip be posted to the AeroElectric list for obvious reasons – once you read it.
I have an all-electric Rv-6A with over 10 years and close to 500 hours on it. I based the electrical system roughly one of Bob’s excellent designs. It initially had one alternator and two batteries, but removed the second battery approx 5 years ago – but, I did make one modification to the design that I almost had cause to regret.
So needless to say, but I will, responsibility for design and incident is totally mine.
But, to get on with the tale
One the way to Texas I had an incident that ended up in with me and aircraft making a 7 mile engine-out glide into Craig Field (Selma, Alabama). NO! It was not fault of the engine or even the subsystems. But, the complete answer is not provided until after my litany of the conditions and symptoms – can you figure it out?
I took off on Thursday (28 May 2009) AM from North Carolina planning on stopping in Mississippi to join up with two friends. After spending the night there, we all three would then head for Texas. But, the weather (as you are aware) has been laying over the southeast for days with rain and more rain – but I launched into it anyway as past Atlanta, GA things were forecast to improve..
Other than dodging lines of clouds and a bit of scud running, but not much, I landed at Alexandria City to the southwest of Atlanta, GA to take on fuel. I then climbed back in and fire it up and took off.
I noticed that during climb-out the engine would occasionally miss and thought the fuel might have had a bit of water in it, but was not really concerned. So I fly on for approx another 45 minutes and had just passed Selma, Alabama and old Craig Air Force base, and turned west toward Mississippi, when more symptoms began to occur.
It started to act like a case of SAG (fouled spark plugs) where the rpm will drop a bit – not dangerous - just nerve racking. But, shortly things began to go beyond the SAG symptoms, so I though I might have an injector problem (like one sticking open or not opening at all). Since our injectors are in pairs, I tried turning one pair off figuring if things got better, then that pair might have a bad injector.
So I turned off one pair and sure enough the symptoms abated a bit (more on this later) so I figured I had a bad injector in that pair. To be certain I turned this “bad” pair back on and turn off the “good” pair expecting the symptoms to really get bad as I would now be running on only the “bad” pair – much to my surprise when I turned off the “good” pair – the symptoms also abated. So that indicated it was not an injector problem – but what?
About this time, I decided to turn the aircraft back around toward Craig Field and dodging clouds headed back with the engine progressively getting worst. It appeared to be a fuel problem (and while that is ultimately the subsystem affected - it was not the root cause). The fuel pressure was ranging from zero to 80 psi, other electrical things were also misbehaving. I check the voltmeter thinking perhaps the alternator had died – but it showed 14 volts. So back to the fuel system.
Finally, the engine just stops with the prop standing still - like a hood ornament, I’m at around 4500-5000 MSL at this point having lost some altitude dodging a cloud (good old GPS just kept pointing to Craig Field). At that time I am 6-7 miles out from Craig Field at 4500 msl with a stopped prop, a crippled seat cushion and a dry mouth. Yes, I’ve been there before, but I don’t think you ever get “use” to it. I recalled thinking –“… things just can’t get worst…” when they very shortly and suddenly - did.
I keyed the radio and made a call to Craig Field at 4 miles on the GPS but before I could get their reply, I heard a “CLANK” (without the engine running you can hear things like that) like a relay springing open (it was) and the entire panel goes dead!!!! No radio, no engine instruments, not even a stinking LED was lit – only the battery powered GPS. Can you spell “total electrical failure?” Talk about a lonely feeling – amazing how comforting having lights on and radio – you could almost convince yourself this was just a practice engine-out landing, but not when the panel goes dark. No engine gauges, no radio, nada!
Well not being one inclined to panic (but I seriously considered it for a moment {:>)), I continued toward Craig field – I mean like there were lots of other alternatives. Well Once again I found myself in the “fortunate position” of being too high, too much altitude. So I put in 40 degs of flaps to steepen my rate of descent. But, then I decided this time that rather than do the 360 I had done on a previous Incident to lose “excessive” altitude, I would try to glide - a more or less - regular traffic pattern.
However, I neglected to remember to retract the flaps. So I found myself on the downwind around mid-field at pattern altitude (which felt normal) until I suddenly realized that you CAN NOT maintain that pattern altitude without an engine!!! (and particularly with 40 deg of flaps deployed – flaps and trim are manual) Duh!
I knew I could never make it to the far end of the runway before turning base (toward the runway) and I was losing altitude at the rate of 400-500 fpm, so I started my turn immediately. To make matters a bit worst - I had been paralleling the runway on the downwind leg a bit too close in – must have been the comforting feeling of being close to safety. This position naturally required a tighter turn and as I turned I saw I was likely to overshoot the runway and land in the grass. So I though I need to steepen this turn further (Yep! COFFIN CORNER was calling), but fortunately glanced at my airspeed indicator - to see it only registering 80 MPH and my rate of descent (normally 400-500 feet per minute) up to over 1000 feet per minute. The seat cushion suddenly vanished from this universe.
But the REAL danger in this situation, as you all know, is your airspeed gets low, you are in a steep bank which greatly raises the stall speed - meaning at 80 mph you are close to a stall in a steep turn while your are not in straight and level. So I immediately straighten out of the turn – the little voice saying “better to land in the grass than get their concrete runway all messed up”. So the immediate danger of a stall was adverted, but I was still pointed toward the ground with a sink rate twice as high as normal (and I’ve manage a few hard landings even with a normal sink rate). Fortunately, the runway was now under my nose rather than grass.
The hardest thing to do when you are sinking at a 1000 fpm a couple hundred feet above the ground (with your nose already pointed at the ground) is to push the stick forward steeping the dive even more. But, I manage to do that and picked enough air speed and energy to flair to a nice touch down – not even a bump. I’ve always been amazed at what total concentration does to improve you landing {:>).
Rolled to the end of the runway and had energy to roll off onto the taxiway. Got out, check under the aircraft for any evidence of leaks and started pulling the aircraft toward the far –off – hangar which had an airplane parked in front of it. A nice looking young woman comes riding a bicycle out to meet me. Hopped off and holding out her hand said “Hi I’m Angie, looks like we’ll be spending time together” – so things were starting to look up {:>)
So pulled the aircraft in to the hangar where the mechanic came over and ask what the problem was. Well, I looked at the volt meter and it said the battery was dead. Mechanic put on a battery charger and announced “Yep! The battery is dead”. So we both concluded that the alternator must have failed and not being able to replenish the drain on the battery by all the electrical systems such as fuel pumps, injectors, ignition coils, etc had drained the battery.
However, there were a few problems with the analysis of a failed alternator. First, the low voltage warning light never came on to warn of an alternator problem, 2nd I never notice the voltmeter showing anything other than what it should for alternator voltage – like around 14 volts. While checking the voltage after the Mechanic had charged the battery, I noticed down below that the “essential bus” switch was in the battery rather than the alternator position, so flicked it back to the alternator position figuring I must have accidentally kicked it while getting to some stuff in the baggage compartment of my RV-6A.
It was getting late and being a bit tired not to mention stressed, I needed to get a rental car and a motel for the night. Did that, eat dinner and went to bed after sitting down and drawing out a problem tree with the entire major elements of the electrical system.
So next morning I show up at the hangar early and met Ben, the mechanic, the battery had received a charge of only 45 minutes the evening before, So I suggested we charged it for another hour and try to start the aircraft. Ben suggested a real stress test of the battery and NOT charge it anymore. Made sense, so we rolled the aircraft out of the hangar. I hopped in, threw a half dozen switches and punched the starter button. The engine started on the first prop blade rotation – so the battery was clearly OK. The engine is humming like a top. So I looked over at the voltmeter expecting it to show only around 12.8 volts instead of the 14 volts a functioning alternator would produce. Much to both my and Ben’s surprise the alternator voltage read 14 volts. We loaded the alternator by turning on the both l00 watt landing lights, all fuel pumps, the pitot heat, etc. The alternator voltage only drops perhaps 0.4 volts clearly indicating the alternator could carry the load and was OK.
So here I am – battery is OK, alternator is OK – engine is purring normally, so clearly this was all a figment of my deteriorating brain cells. I loaded up the aircraft and launched to do a few circuits of the airport – I did so and all was operating normally and so I radio them I was head onward to Texas. While flying (with my only functional eyeball on the voltmeter), my mind could not let go of the problem and finally the light bulb came on.
The essential bus switch had (for my entire 10 + years of flying)always been in the alternator position. The purpose of this switch is, of course, to isolate the battery from the alternator should the alternator fail - to prevent an alternator problem from draining the battery. So in event of an alternator problem, you move the switch from alternator to battery. Its call the essential bus because you only have the essential things drawing from the battery so you wont’ drain it as quickly. The idea is to give you time (generally around 30 minutes) to find a safe place to land in case of alternator failure.
Well, at some point I had either (not paying attention) turned the switch to battery thinking I was turning the voltmeter switch to battery(more on that below) - or accidentally had move the switch from alternator to battery without noticing it by kicking it, etc. However, it was sort of protected in its position from accidental activation. It must have happened during refueling – as I got approx 45 minutes down the road on the battery after take off before quality battery time started to deteriorate. As the battery voltage fell due to the load (and no alternator link to replenish it), electrical things (mainly computers first) started acting up until they could not longer run the engine. The injectors would not open fully, etc. Then as the voltage level further decreased, the master relay which the battery held closed and which connected the (fully functional) alternator to the rest of the electrical system - opened up and removed ALL power from the electrical system. So no radio, no gauges, etc.
Oh, another little factor that may have contributed, the voltmeter has a tiny toggle switch by it marked ALT BAT1 BAT2 for checking alternator battery 1 and battery 2 (which I no longer fly with) voltages. Down below It a couple of inches and off to the right is the essential bus normal size toggle switch – also marked ALT BAT1 BAT1. I normally never touch it and don’t even think about it. But I could have reached for the voltmeter toggle thinking to check my battery voltage (which I do as a regular thing) and perhaps distracted by something reached a bit further down and instead moved the essential bus switch from Alternator to Battery causing this entire event. I know that I did not consciously do it. So it is either accidental or absence minded activation - either way ends with the same results {:>)
Now it became clear why it didn’t matter which pair of fuel injectors I turned off – turning off either pair improved the situation because it slightly reduced the electrical load by a few amps – and the engine ran slightly better for a few moments. The same thing had happened when turning off one of the EFI fuel pumps – but what threw me was the alternator voltage continued to be normal during this.
After I knew the cause (switch in wrong position), I decided the problem was fixed so no reason to return to NC, and I just continued on to Texas.
I know some of you may think that removing my second battery was a mistake – but, consider this, having another battery could have meant I would have been much further from a suitable airfield before they both went south. On the other hand, it might have caused me to at least think to throw the essential bus switch to the second battery and have the Light bulb come on. Who really knows. But, I have in mind a simply addition to my electrical circuit that should help in the future.
I do want to state that this time when the problems started I DID switch fuel tanks – but naturally it had no effect because this time it turned out, it was not a fuel problem – not the root cause at least.
So what are the lessons learned:
- Put EVERY critical switch on your before-takeoff Check list
- Perhaps put a guard around such critical switches to force conscious activation
- Don’t (hard not to) get overly focused on what you think is the problem – consider other possibilities. I thought it was a fuel problem (I even switched fuel tanks this time) – it turned out to be electrical in its root cause.
- While the fuel pressure was jumping all over the place and the EGT was erratic and engine surging strongly indicating a fuel problem – the ultimate cause was electrical. Once the voltage got below a certain point the EC2 computer was still trying to pull the injectors open, but with the voltage so low it could not do it properly.
- When the battery voltage dropped below a certain point, the master relay released and removed the alternator from the electrical system and the panel went dark – even though the alternator was still working
- Immediately turn to the nearest airfield when serious problems occur - THEN work on fixing them. I only delayed for perhaps 2-3 minutes, but that could have made a difference.
- Watch out for Coffin Corner turn when turning base to final – airspeed really bleeds off fast with no engine pulling you along (and especially with flaps deployed!)
- IF you change your mind about landing approach type - remember to reconfigure your aircraft for the last decision – I had left my flaps deployed when I should have remembered to retracted them. Did that help prevent a Coffin Corner stall and spin or would it have put me closer to it?
- You must increase airspeed over the wing to get the sufficient energy to over come a high sink rate. Pulling back on the stick when the ground is staring you in the face is the natural reaction – but, pushing forward to lower the nose is the correct action – providing of course you have sufficient altitude!
- Battery life – I had a two year old 680 odyssey battery which I maintain a trickle charge on whenever I’m not flying. With two EFI fuel pumps, boost pump, injectors, coils, EC2 and radio and just having started the engine before take off – this battery lasted 55 minutes. Well, the last 5 minutes were not quality battery time. So in my case, 30 minutes appears to be a very realistic battery life. In fact, had I turned off one EFI pump and the boost pump would have gained a few more miles. But, if I had recognized the need to turn them off at that time (I normally turn them off at cruise altitude), then I would have known how to “fix” the problem.
- I’ve decided to add a Schokkty diode between my essential bus and the alternator – so that as long as the alternator is producing sufficient voltage, then the battery will be getting some charge to replace the drain. I’ve also decided to make that switch position a check-list item.
So what it boils down to – if I had recognized early on that it was an electrical problem and not focused so much on the fuel system, I may have noticed the essential bus switch in the wrong position. Force yourself to examine other possible causes (easy to say – harder to do).
NEVER, NEVER forget that flying the airplane is the first and only priority in this type of situation
NEVER, NEVER forget that saving your butt is the ultimately end-all priority. When I decided that landing on the grass was preferable to putting a hole in their concrete – I may have made a life-saving decision.
So that’s my story and I’m sticking to it.
Fly safe, guys!!
Ed
Ed Anderson
Rv-6A N494BW Rotary Powered
Matthews, NC
eanderson(at)carolina.rr.com (eanderson(at)carolina.rr.com)
http://www.andersonee.com
http://www.dmack.net/mazda/index.html
http://www.flyrotary.com/
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_________________ Ed Anderson
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Ed Anderson
Joined: 10 Jan 2006 Posts: 475
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Posted: Wed Jun 03, 2009 4:43 pm Post subject: Essential Incident - Almost (Long) |
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Thanks, Matt
Ed Anderson
Rv-6A N494BW Rotary Powered
Matthews, NC
eanderson(at)carolina.rr.com
http://www.andersonee.com
http://www.dmack.net/mazda/index.html
http://www.flyrotary.com/
http://members.cox.net/rogersda/rotary/configs.htm#N494BW
http://www.rotaryaviation.com/Rotorhead%20Truth.htm
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Matthews, NC
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Ed Anderson
Joined: 10 Jan 2006 Posts: 475
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Posted: Wed Jun 03, 2009 4:52 pm Post subject: Essential Incident - Almost (Long) |
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Thanks Kevin
Could not agree with your points more. Yes, I have a pre-takeoff check list
which I do use - however, as you point out - if an item is not on it that is
critical to safe flight, then it is certainly incomplete.
I do not have an in-flight emergency check list, but will certainly give
that some serious thought - it would be helpful if it just isolated whether
the problem was the fuel system, electrical system and their subsystems.
Another good suggestion
Ah, good analysis, Kevin. You are correct, my low voltage light is hooked to
my alternator circuit and not the essential bus. The logic (if there was
any) was that if the alternator started to fail then the warning light would
warn me before I started to drain the battery. However, in this case, the
alternator was continuing to produce 14 V so naturally the low voltage light
never came on. So again, I agree on all the points you made.
Just goes to show you how even things designed to make it safer can do the
opposite under certain conditions. Clearly, there are a few things that I
need to change {:>)
Ed
Ed Anderson
Rv-6A N494BW Rotary Powered
Matthews, NC
eanderson(at)carolina.rr.com
http://www.andersonee.com
http://www.dmack.net/mazda/index.html
http://www.flyrotary.com/
http://members.cox.net/rogersda/rotary/configs.htm#N494BW
http://www.rotaryaviation.com/Rotorhead%20Truth.htm
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Bill Schlatterer
Joined: 09 Jan 2006 Posts: 195
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Posted: Wed Jun 03, 2009 6:02 pm Post subject: Essential Incident - Almost (Long) |
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Ed, just curious,... How is it that your essential switch disconnects the
main bus? Usually, they power the essential bus but you have to shut off
the Main bus (I think) manually as a safety feature. When you heard the
CLANK which you said was the main bus relay disconnecting, that would have
been caused by the absolute drain of the battery. BUT, with the master
relay still engaged, the alternator should have still been charging the
battery? (even with the E-Bus switch thrown,... I think?
If your essential completely reroutes the current from the alternator around
the battery, then what takes up the load with the single battery off line?
Is that what the second battery (removed) was supposed to do?
Just wondering how it works?
Thanks Bill S
7a finishing / Z13/8 and other stuff
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etienne.phillips(at)gmail Guest
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Posted: Wed Jun 03, 2009 9:57 pm Post subject: Essential Incident - Almost (Long) |
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Hi Ed
Aren't you glad you weren't flying at night!
A diagram of your electrical system as it was would help us understand what you did, and why its design caused the failure... Of particular interest is why switching on the e-bus disconnected the alternator. I also can't seem to make out why when the main bus still had power from the alternator, the contactor died when the e-bus voltage dropped. It may prompt Bob to suggest a better solution to what you're planning
Not pointing fingers here, I just can't visualise how it's all hooked up!
Thanks
Etienne
On 03 Jun 2009, at 9:53 PM, Ed Anderson wrote:
[quote]It was suggested by one of the aeroelectric list members, Sam Hoskins, that the following report of an incident I had on a recent trip be posted to the AeroElectric list for obvious reasons – once you read it.
I have an all-electric Rv-6A with over 10 years and close to 500 hours on it. I based the electrical system roughly one of Bob’s excellent designs. It initially had one alternator and two batteries, but removed the second battery approx 5 years ago – but, I did make one modification to the design that I almost had cause to regret.
So needless to say, but I will, responsibility for design and incident is totally mine.
But, to get on with the tale
One the way to Texas I had an incident that ended up in with me and aircraft making a 7 mile engine-out glide into Craig Field (Selma, Alabama). NO! It was not fault of the engine or even the subsystems. But, the complete answer is not provided until after my litany of the conditions and symptoms – can you figure it out?
Fly safe, guys!!
Ed
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kahuna
Joined: 02 Feb 2007 Posts: 93
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Posted: Thu Jun 04, 2009 4:20 am Post subject: Essential Incident - Almost (Long) |
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Great Great story Ed. Thank you for sharing.
On the checklist thing, One thing I did was start with the premise that any idiot should be able to jump in my airplane and fly it. This can be a tall order as some of my flying buddies are even bigger idiots than me.
To test my check lists, I let several pilots jump in my plane and take it for a ride. Needless to say, my check list, and cockpit nomenclature, went through quite a few additions, and very good ones. From the moment they climb in, their faces contort and they fish and find, asking questions that pointed to issues. In the heat of battle, you dont want to have to remember how things/systems work, this switch to that positions for this thing to happen etc.. Trying to make the activities idiot proof is important to me, cause I can turn into a real idiot often, especially when things go awry, my idiot factor increases dramatically. I have had many opportunities to prove this to myself over my thousands of RV flying hours.
While this technique may not have identified this item, it might identify others. Every question from another pilot who has to get in it and get air born, means some complexity or area of confusion that is a candidate for addressing.
Also since I rely on my electrical system heavily(too much gee whiz stuff), when Im zipping along from A to B, I fail things just to verify expected behavior. Usually its just entertainment for me on my cross countries, but mostly is verifies the fail overs work as designed. Thinking of failure modes can occupy those mundane cross countries as well.
Just a few thoughts for you and thanks for the great write up Ed.
Best,
Mike
[img]cid:1__=08BBFF58DFD2D63A8f9e8a93df938(at)us.ibm.com[/img]"Ed Anderson" ---06/03/2009 04:30:14 PM---It was suggested by one of the aeroelectric list members, Sam Hoskins, that the following report of
[img]cid:2__=08BBFF58DFD2D63A8f9e8a93df938(at)us.ibm.com[/img]
From:[img]cid:2__=08BBFF58DFD2D63A8f9e8a93df938(at)us.ibm.com[/img]
"Ed Anderson" <eanderson(at)carolina.rr.com> [img]cid:2__=08BBFF58DFD2D63A8f9e8a93df938(at)us.ibm.com[/img]
To:[img]cid:2__=08BBFF58DFD2D63A8f9e8a93df938(at)us.ibm.com[/img]
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Date:[img]cid:2__=08BBFF58DFD2D63A8f9e8a93df938(at)us.ibm.com[/img]
06/03/2009 04:30 PM [img]cid:2__=08BBFF58DFD2D63A8f9e8a93df938(at)us.ibm.com[/img]
Subject:[img]cid:2__=08BBFF58DFD2D63A8f9e8a93df938(at)us.ibm.com[/img]
AeroElectric-List: Essential Incident - Almost (Long) [img]cid:2__=08BBFF58DFD2D63A8f9e8a93df938(at)us.ibm.com[/img]
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owner-aeroelectric-list-server(at)matronics.com
It was suggested by one of the aeroelectric list members, Sam Hoskins, that the following report of an incident I had on a recent trip be posted to the AeroElectric list for obvious reasons – once you read it.
I have an all-electric Rv-6A with over 10 years and close to 500 hours on it. I based the electrical system roughly one of Bob’s excellent designs. It initially had one alternator and two batteries, but removed the second battery approx 5 years ago – but, I did make one modification to the design that I almost had cause to regret.
So needless to say, but I will, responsibility for design and incident is totally mine.
But, to get on with the tale
One the way to Texas I had an incident that ended up in with me and aircraft making a 7 mile engine-out glide into Craig Field (Selma, Alabama). NO! It was not fault of the engine or even the subsystems. But, the complete answer is not provided until after my litany of the conditions and symptoms – can you figure it out?
I took off on Thursday (28 May 2009) AM from North Carolina planning on stopping in Mississippi to join up with two friends. After spending the night there, we all three would then head for Texas. But, the weather (as you are aware) has been laying over the southeast for days with rain and more rain – but I launched into it anyway as past Atlanta, GA things were forecast to improve..
Other than dodging lines of clouds and a bit of scud running, but not much, I landed at Alexandria City to the southwest of Atlanta, GA to take on fuel. I then climbed back in and fire it up and took off.
I noticed that during climb-out the engine would occasionally miss and thought the fuel might have had a bit of water in it, but was not really concerned. So I fly on for approx another 45 minutes and had just passed Selma, Alabama and old Craig Air Force base, and turned west toward Mississippi, when more symptoms began to occur.
It started to act like a case of SAG (fouled spark plugs) where the rpm will drop a bit – not dangerous - just nerve racking. But, shortly things began to go beyond the SAG symptoms, so I though I might have an injector problem (like one sticking open or not opening at all). Since our injectors are in pairs, I tried turning one pair off figuring if things got better, then that pair might have a bad injector.
So I turned off one pair and sure enough the symptoms abated a bit (more on this later) so I figured I had a bad injector in that pair. To be certain I turned this “bad” pair back on and turn off the “good” pair expecting the symptoms to really get bad as I would now be running on only the “bad” pair – much to my surprise when I turned off the “good” pair – the symptoms also abated. So that indicated it was not an injector problem – but what?
About this time, I decided to turn the aircraft back around toward Craig Field and dodging clouds headed back with the engine progressively getting worst. It appeared to be a fuel problem (and while that is ultimately the subsystem affected - it was not the root cause). The fuel pressure was ranging from zero to 80 psi, other electrical things were also misbehaving. I check the voltmeter thinking perhaps the alternator had died – but it showed 14 volts. So back to the fuel system.
Finally, the engine just stops with the prop standing still - like a hood ornament, I’m at around 4500-5000 MSL at this point having lost some altitude dodging a cloud (good old GPS just kept pointing to Craig Field). At that time I am 6-7 miles out from Craig Field at 4500 msl with a stopped prop, a crippled seat cushion and a dry mouth. Yes, I’ve been there before, but I don’t think you ever get “use” to it. I recalled thinking –“… things just can’t get worst…” when they very shortly and suddenly - did.
I keyed the radio and made a call to Craig Field at 4 miles on the GPS but before I could get their reply, I heard a “CLANK” (without the engine running you can hear things like that) like a relay springing open (it was) and the entire panel goes dead!!!! No radio, no engine instruments, not even a stinking LED was lit – only the battery powered GPS. Can you spell “total electrical failure?” Talk about a lonely feeling – amazing how comforting having lights on and radio – you could almost convince yourself this was just a practice engine-out landing, but not when the panel goes dark. No engine gauges, no radio, nada!
Well not being one inclined to panic (but I seriously considered it for a moment {:>)), I continued toward Craig field – I mean like there were lots of other alternatives. Well Once again I found myself in the “fortunate position” of being too high, too much altitude. So I put in 40 degs of flaps to steepen my rate of descent. But, then I decided this time that rather than do the 360 I had done on a previous Incident to lose “excessive” altitude, I would try to glide - a more or less - regular traffic pattern.
However, I neglected to remember to retract the flaps. So I found myself on the downwind around mid-field at pattern altitude (which felt normal) until I suddenly realized that you CAN NOT maintain that pattern altitude without an engine!!! (and particularly with 40 deg of flaps deployed – flaps and trim are manual) Duh!
I knew I could never make it to the far end of the runway before turning base (toward the runway) and I was losing altitude at the rate of 400-500 fpm, so I started my turn immediately. To make matters a bit worst - I had been paralleling the runway on the downwind leg a bit too close in – must have been the comforting feeling of being close to safety. This position naturally required a tighter turn and as I turned I saw I was likely to overshoot the runway and land in the grass. So I though I need to steepen this turn further (Yep! COFFIN CORNER was calling), but fortunately glanced at my airspeed indicator - to see it only registering 80 MPH and my rate of descent (normally 400-500 feet per minute) up to over 1000 feet per minute. The seat cushion suddenly vanished from this universe.
But the REAL danger in this situation, as you all know, is your airspeed gets low, you are in a steep bank which greatly raises the stall speed - meaning at 80 mph you are close to a stall in a steep turn while your are not in straight and level. So I immediately straighten out of the turn – the little voice saying “better to land in the grass than get their concrete runway all messed up”. So the immediate danger of a stall was adverted, but I was still pointed toward the ground with a sink rate twice as high as normal (and I’ve manage a few hard landings even with a normal sink rate). Fortunately, the runway was now under my nose rather than grass.
The hardest thing to do when you are sinking at a 1000 fpm a couple hundred feet above the ground (with your nose already pointed at the ground) is to push the stick forward steeping the dive even more. But, I manage to do that and picked enough air speed and energy to flair to a nice touch down – not even a bump. I’ve always been amazed at what total concentration does to improve you landing {:>).
Rolled to the end of the runway and had energy to roll off onto the taxiway. Got out, check under the aircraft for any evidence of leaks and started pulling the aircraft toward the far –off – hangar which had an airplane parked in front of it. A nice looking young woman comes riding a bicycle out to meet me. Hopped off and holding out her hand said “Hi I’m Angie, looks like we’ll be spending time together” – so things were starting to look up {:>)
So pulled the aircraft in to the hangar where the mechanic came over and ask what the problem was. Well, I looked at the volt meter and it said the battery was dead. Mechanic put on a battery charger and announced “Yep! The battery is dead”. So we both concluded that the alternator must have failed and not being able to replenish the drain on the battery by all the electrical systems such as fuel pumps, injectors, ignition coils, etc had drained the battery.
However, there were a few problems with the analysis of a failed alternator. First, the low voltage warning light never came on to warn of an alternator problem, 2nd I never notice the voltmeter showing anything other than what it should for alternator voltage – like around 14 volts. While checking the voltage after the Mechanic had charged the battery, I noticed down below that the “essential bus” switch was in the battery rather than the alternator position, so flicked it back to the alternator position figuring I must have accidentally kicked it while getting to some stuff in the baggage compartment of my RV-6A.
It was getting late and being a bit tired not to mention stressed, I needed to get a rental car and a motel for the night. Did that, eat dinner and went to bed after sitting down and drawing out a problem tree with the entire major elements of the electrical system.
So next morning I show up at the hangar early and met Ben, the mechanic, the battery had received a charge of only 45 minutes the evening before, So I suggested we charged it for another hour and try to start the aircraft. Ben suggested a real stress test of the battery and NOT charge it anymore. Made sense, so we rolled the aircraft out of the hangar. I hopped in, threw a half dozen switches and punched the starter button. The engine started on the first prop blade rotation – so the battery was clearly OK. The engine is humming like a top. So I looked over at the voltmeter expecting it to show only around 12.8 volts instead of the 14 volts a functioning alternator would produce. Much to both my and Ben’s surprise the alternator voltage read 14 volts. We loaded the alternator by turning on the both l00 watt landing lights, all fuel pumps, the pitot heat, etc. The alternator voltage only drops perhaps 0.4 volts clearly indicating the alternator could carry the load and was OK.
So here I am – battery is OK, alternator is OK – engine is purring normally, so clearly this was all a figment of my deteriorating brain cells. I loaded up the aircraft and launched to do a few circuits of the airport – I did so and all was operating normally and so I radio them I was head onward to Texas. While flying (with my only functional eyeball on the voltmeter), my mind could not let go of the problem and finally the light bulb came on.
The essential bus switch had (for my entire 10 + years of flying)always been in the alternator position. The purpose of this switch is, of course, to isolate the battery from the alternator should the alternator fail - to prevent an alternator problem from draining the battery. So in event of an alternator problem, you move the switch from alternator to battery. Its call the essential bus because you only have the essential things drawing from the battery so you wont’ drain it as quickly. The idea is to give you time (generally around 30 minutes) to find a safe place to land in case of alternator failure.
Well, at some point I had either (not paying attention) turned the switch to battery thinking I was turning the voltmeter switch to battery(more on that below) - or accidentally had move the switch from alternator to battery without noticing it by kicking it, etc. However, it was sort of protected in its position from accidental activation. It must have happened during refueling – as I got approx 45 minutes down the road on the battery after take off before quality battery time started to deteriorate. As the battery voltage fell due to the load (and no alternator link to replenish it), electrical things (mainly computers first) started acting up until they could not longer run the engine. The injectors would not open fully, etc. Then as the voltage level further decreased, the master relay which the battery held closed and which connected the (fully functional) alternator to the rest of the electrical system - opened up and removed ALL power from the electrical system. So no radio, no gauges, etc.
Oh, another little factor that may have contributed, the voltmeter has a tiny toggle switch by it marked ALT BAT1 BAT2 for checking alternator battery 1 and battery 2 (which I no longer fly with) voltages. Down below It a couple of inches and off to the right is the essential bus normal size toggle switch – also marked ALT BAT1 BAT1. I normally never touch it and don’t even think about it. But I could have reached for the voltmeter toggle thinking to check my battery voltage (which I do as a regular thing) and perhaps distracted by something reached a bit further down and instead moved the essential bus switch from Alternator to Battery causing this entire event. I know that I did not consciously do it. So it is either accidental or absence minded activation - either way ends with the same results {:>)
Now it became clear why it didn’t matter which pair of fuel injectors I turned off – turning off either pair improved the situation because it slightly reduced the electrical load by a few amps – and the engine ran slightly better for a few moments. The same thing had happened when turning off one of the EFI fuel pumps – but what threw me was the alternator voltage continued to be normal during this.
After I knew the cause (switch in wrong position), I decided the problem was fixed so no reason to return to NC, and I just continued on to Texas.
I know some of you may think that removing my second battery was a mistake – but, consider this, having another battery could have meant I would have been much further from a suitable airfield before they both went south. On the other hand, it might have caused me to at least think to throw the essential bus switch to the second battery and have the Light bulb come on. Who really knows. But, I have in mind a simply addition to my electrical circuit that should help in the future.
I do want to state that this time when the problems started I DID switch fuel tanks – but naturally it had no effect because this time it turned out, it was not a fuel problem – not the root cause at least.
So what are the lessons learned:
1. Put EVERY critical switch on your before-takeoff Check list
2. Perhaps put a guard around such critical switches to force conscious activation
3. Don’t (hard not to) get overly focused on what you think is the problem – consider other possibilities. I thought it was a fuel problem (I even switched fuel tanks this time) – it turned out to be electrical in its root cause.
4. While the fuel pressure was jumping all over the place and the EGT was erratic and engine surging strongly indicating a fuel problem – the ultimate cause was electrical. Once the voltage got below a certain point the EC2 computer was still trying to pull the injectors open, but with the voltage so low it could not do it properly.
5. When the battery voltage dropped below a certain point, the master relay released and removed the alternator from the electrical system and the panel went dark – even though the alternator was still working
6. Immediately turn to the nearest airfield when serious problems occur - THEN work on fixing them. I only delayed for perhaps 2-3 minutes, but that could have made a difference.
7. Watch out for Coffin Corner turn when turning base to final – airspeed really bleeds off fast with no engine pulling you along (and especially with flaps deployed!)
8. IF you change your mind about landing approach type - remember to reconfigure your aircraft for the last decision – I had left my flaps deployed when I should have remembered to retracted them. Did that help prevent a Coffin Corner stall and spin or would it have put me closer to it?
9. You must increase airspeed over the wing to get the sufficient energy to over come a high sink rate. Pulling back on the stick when the ground is staring you in the face is the natural reaction – but, pushing forward to lower the nose is the correct action – providing of course you have sufficient altitude!
10. Battery life – I had a two year old 680 odyssey battery which I maintain a trickle charge on whenever I’m not flying. With two EFI fuel pumps, boost pump, injectors, coils, EC2 and radio and just having started the engine before take off – this battery lasted 55 minutes. Well, the last 5 minutes were not quality battery time. So in my case, 30 minutes appears to be a very realistic battery life. In fact, had I turned off one EFI pump and the boost pump would have gained a few more miles. But, if I had recognized the need to turn them off at that time (I normally turn them off at cruise altitude), then I would have known how to “fix” the problem.
11. I’ve decided to add a Schokkty diode between my essential bus and the alternator – so that as long as the alternator is producing sufficient voltage, then the battery will be getting some charge to replace the drain. I’ve also decided to make that switch position a check-list item.
So what it boils down to – if I had recognized early on that it was an electrical problem and not focused so much on the fuel system, I may have noticed the essential bus switch in the wrong position. Force yourself to examine other possible causes (easy to say – harder to do).
NEVER, NEVER forget that flying the airplane is the first and only priority in this type of situation
NEVER, NEVER forget that saving your butt is the ultimately end-all priority. When I decided that landing on the grass was preferable to putting a hole in their concrete – I may have made a life-saving decision.
So that’s my story and I’m sticking to it.
Fly safe, guys!!
Ed
Ed Anderson
Rv-6A N494BW Rotary Powered
Matthews, NC
eanderson(at)carolina.rr.com
http://www.andersonee.com
http://www.dmack.net/mazda/index.html
http://www.flyrotary.com/
http://members.cox.net/rogersda/rotary/configs.htm#N494BW
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Speedy11(at)aol.com Guest
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Posted: Thu Jun 04, 2009 5:11 am Post subject: Essential Incident - Almost (Long) |
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Ed,
Great story - thanks for sharing.
Thanks also for your insight into the problem, analysis, and solutions.
Stan Sutterfield
Limited Time Offers: Save big on popular laptops at Dell
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Ed Anderson
Joined: 10 Jan 2006 Posts: 475
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Posted: Thu Jun 04, 2009 5:24 pm Post subject: Essential Incident - Almost (Long) |
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Hi Bill,
Perhaps a bit clear explanation of my circuit. When I move my essential bus
switch from ALT (alternator) to BAT1 (battery1), it removes the link between
battery and alternator. However, the master relay still closed by the
battery voltage, so this provides a path for the alternator to continue to
feed the rest of the (none essential systems - such as landing lights,
strobe light, transponder, etc).
When the battery voltage dropped low enough it was unable to hold the
master relay closed - which opened removing alternator voltage from the rest
of the system. By that time, the battery was too low to support the
essential systems such as my engine and to include the radio.
When the battery is disconnected from the alternator, there is no noticeable
variation in my alternator voltage indicating that the none-essential
subsystems apparently provide sufficient load stability. That's my best
analysis of the system.
Ed
Ed Anderson
Rv-6A N494BW Rotary Powered
Matthews, NC
eanderson(at)carolina.rr.com
http://www.andersonee.com
http://www.dmack.net/mazda/index.html
http://www.flyrotary.com/
http://members.cox.net/rogersda/rotary/configs.htm#N494BW
http://www.rotaryaviation.com/Rotorhead%20Truth.htm
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_________________ Ed Anderson
Rv-6A N494BW Rotary Powered
Matthews, NC
eanderson@carolina.rr.com |
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Ed Anderson
Joined: 10 Jan 2006 Posts: 475
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Posted: Thu Jun 04, 2009 5:34 pm Post subject: Essential Incident - Almost (Long) |
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Hi Etienne,
No one can point finger at me better than myself. As I indicated the modifications to Bob’s excellent design and resulting incident rest strictly with me – no getting around that (even if I tried).
As best I can recall from over 10 years ago, I decided I did not want the voltage drop caused by a isolation diode (as you might imagine I am reconsidering that decision). So when I move my essential bus switch from Alternator to Battery, the battery is completely disconnected from alternator circuit. At the same time the battery voltage is what is holding my master relay closed so that the alternator feeds the electrical system. Normally (at least for the past 10 years and 450 + hours) has worked as I had envisioned. But, never having an alternator failure, I never had reason to move the switch from the Alternator position.
In this case, the switch was moved to battery which isolated the battery from the alternator completely – This was of course unintentional, but all the same resulted in exhaustion of the battery while I still had a perfectly good alternator functioning. Needless to say, that requires me to reconsider my design.
The simplest fix appears to be to put the isolation diode between alternator and battery essential bus.
Ed
Ed Anderson
Rv-6A N494BW Rotary Powered
Matthews, NC
eanderson(at)carolina.rr.com
http://www.andersonee.com
http://www.dmack.net/mazda/index.html
http://www.flyrotary.com/
http://members.cox.net/rogersda/rotary/configs.htm#N494BW
http://www.rotaryaviation.com/Rotorhead%20Truth.htm[url=http://www.dmack.net/mazda/index.html][/url]
From: owner-aeroelectric-list-server(at)matronics.com [mailto:owner-aeroelectric-list-server(at)matronics.com] On Behalf Of Etienne Phillips
Sent: Thursday, June 04, 2009 1:55 AM
To: aeroelectric-list(at)matronics.com
Subject: Re: AeroElectric-List: Essential Incident - Almost (Long)
Hi Ed
Aren't you glad you weren't flying at night!
A diagram of your electrical system as it was would help us understand what you did, and why its design caused the failure... Of particular interest is why switching on the e-bus disconnected the alternator. I also can't seem to make out why when the main bus still had power from the alternator, the contactor died when the e-bus voltage dropped. It may prompt Bob to suggest a better solution to what you're planning
Not pointing fingers here, I just can't visualise how it's all hooked up!
Thanks
Etienne
On 03 Jun 2009, at 9:53 PM, Ed Anderson wrote:
It was suggested by one of the aeroelectric list members, Sam Hoskins, that the following report of an incident I had on a recent trip be posted to the AeroElectric list for obvious reasons – once you read it.
I have an all-electric Rv-6A with over 10 years and close to 500 hours on it. I based the electrical system roughly one of Bob’s excellent designs. It initially had one alternator and two batteries, but removed the second battery approx 5 years ago – but, I did make one modification to the design that I almost had cause to regret.
So needless to say, but I will, responsibility for design and incident is totally mine.
But, to get on with the tale
One the way to Texas I had an incident that ended up in with me and aircraft making a 7 mile engine-out glide into Craig Field (Selma, Alabama). NO! It was not fault of the engine or even the subsystems. But, the complete answer is not provided until after my litany of the conditions and symptoms – can you figure it out?
Fly safe, guys!!
Ed
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Rv-6A N494BW Rotary Powered
Matthews, NC
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klehman(at)albedo.net Guest
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Posted: Fri Jun 05, 2009 3:45 am Post subject: Essential Incident - Almost (Long) |
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A related discussion FWIW:
I still think that the electrically dependent engine and especially with
internal regulated alternators, may be better served by connecting the
alternator to the battery side of a battery contactor. Even more so if
you have a separate OV contactor or if you run small batteries. I've
done that on both alternators of my Z-14 system. Separate guarded
switches control the OV contactors.
In a smoke situation I want to kill everything not required by the
engine but if the smoke stops I still want the option of keeping the
alternator. I don't want to risk load dumping my internally regulated
alternator if I don't have to. I run very small 8AH batteries but
interestingly one of them lost almost all of its capacity very quickly
last winter. The second one still cranked the engine fairly well so it
was not obvious. It did not seem to go open circuit as it would still
supply a 5 amp load for 2 or 3 minutes. De-sulphating pulses made no
improvement.
My voltmeters and OV sensing are off the battery busses since they run
the engine.
Ken
Ed Anderson wrote:
Quote: |
Hi Bill,
Perhaps a bit clear explanation of my circuit. When I move my essential bus
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Lenny Iszak
Joined: 23 Mar 2008 Posts: 270
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Posted: Fri Jun 05, 2009 6:45 pm Post subject: Re: Essential Incident - Almost (Long) |
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Ed,
Wouldn't isolating the battery from the alternator stop the alternator from generating power? Or do you have a permanent magnet alternator?
Or was the alternator originally switched to the auxiliary, now non-existent battery to keep feeding your e-bus?
Lenny
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Ed Anderson
Joined: 10 Jan 2006 Posts: 475
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Posted: Sat Jun 06, 2009 5:11 am Post subject: Essential Incident - Almost (Long) |
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Hi Lenny,
I have an auto alternator with internal regulator. The alternator ONLY
needs battery voltage to get started - once its producing voltage it uses
its own voltage to keep its field coils energized and magnetized. In fact,
I can pull the alternator field coil circuit breaker once the engine is
running and it has no effect on the alternator. Yes, you do need the
battery to jump start /bootstrap the alternator to producing voltage.
Now with the typical aircraft alternator, it's a bit different story. They
normally have an external regulator which permits you to remove voltage from
the alternator field coil and in this case, if you pull the CB and remove
voltage from the field coil it will stop producing voltage. But, once again
you only need the battery to get it started.
At least that is my understanding of the major difference between auto and
aircraft alternators.
Ed
Ed Anderson
Rv-6A N494BW Rotary Powered
Matthews, NC
eanderson(at)carolina.rr.com
http://www.andersonee.com
http://www.dmack.net/mazda/index.html
http://www.flyrotary.com/
http://members.cox.net/rogersda/rotary/configs.htm#N494BW
http://www.rotaryaviation.com/Rotorhead%20Truth.htm
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_________________ Ed Anderson
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Matthews, NC
eanderson@carolina.rr.com |
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