Author Topic: Inflight engine fire survival story  (Read 642 times)

Offline Wolfala

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Inflight engine fire survival story
« on: May 27, 2005, 12:27:27 PM »
http://carneyaviation.com/enginefire/

This was at my flying club - and I flew this plane the day before it happened.

Saturday, 21 May 2005, Barbara and I took her two grandchildren to do a little touring in South Jersey and to take in the Millville Air Show. If you missed this show, too bad for you. It's a must-see. If you're close enough to tour South Jersey and have not, I'm sorry for your loss on that account too. But I was born there, so I'm prejudiced.

We began our return flight to Connecticut: VFR, because the weather was suitable and I like to give my passengers something to look at if I can. The plane is a Grumman Tiger, known for its excellent visibility.

We took off before sunset because part of the route is over New Jersey's Pine Barrens, home of the Jersey Devil. I don't like to fly over that area at night. There are suitable landing sites, but they are few and far between. Also, it would take a long time for any kind of help to reach a pilot who was forced to land there and needed assistance afterward.

Just after we had cleared the worrisome terrain, the engine started making a ticking noise, similar to an exhaust leak. We lost about 15 knots of airspeed, but everything else seemed normal. Oil temperature was a little on the high side, but well within the green. Oil pressure was normal.

A few minutes later, the mystery wasn't solved but the course of action was clear. With a definitive POW! the engine stopped making power and flames appeared over the nose (sorry, no picture).

This was my lucky day. We were a couple of miles southeast of RJ Miller Air Park, which has a very long runway. Essentially, we were on the downwind leg to runway 24, so I just practiced what I preach and made a standard power-off approach and landing, securing the engine in the process. The fire did not go out until shortly after we were stopped and had evacuated the airplane (quickly).

That's when my traveller's knowledge of that airport was reinforced. There's not much around there, it's painfully difficult to find a hotel room on Saturday night, and it's just about impossible to rent a car on Sunday morning. The Ocean County sheriff and the Berkeley Township police did an outstanding job of getting us settled in for the night, and we got lucky with Avis for the rental car.

  I went back the next morning to inspect the damage by daylight. Apparently the fuel for the fire was engine oil. Some of it obscured my view of the runway on short final, but not completely. The windscreen stayed clean until I decelerated and flared, by which time there was enough to see out the side for a normal landing.


The scorched fiberglass of the nose bowl smelled a little bit like straw, so my first thought (while still airborne) was that I had missed a bird's nest on pre-flight inspection. This is a problem with the Grumman because birds like to build nests between the forward bulkhead and the nose bowl, where they are just about impossible to see.

 The right side of the engine looked normal.


   Imagine my wonder when I opened the left cowl and found the mess you see here. That is part of the #2 cylinder's connecting rod lying on top of the cooling fins, exactly where I found it. Just above it in the photos, you'll see a little piece of "sheet metal" butted up against the base of the cylinder. That is part of the piston skirt.


  Viewed from a slightly higher angle, it's easy to see the piston and how the connecting rod tore part of it away. There's also a dimple in the crankshaft (not the oil hole) that I don't think Lycoming put there. These photos also show a hole on the bottom of the crankcase on the other side of the engine.


  Here's the view into the right-side engine cowl, showing a tear on the bottom behind the exhaust pipe. Also, the worm's eye view of the right cowl flap area. It looks like the fire wasn't just on top of the engine.


   As you can see, the piston's connecting rod bent a little before it snapped. One end of it got kind of hot, too.


When I fly VFR, if I'm not using radar advisory service I usually monitor the appropriate radar facility anyway, in case I hear them point out traffic to another airplane, and the traffic sounds like it's me. So I was already on the McGuire freq when trouble struck, and I had time to make a mayday call with a position report. As they must, they asked me about fuel and souls on board. I always figured they asked about fuel so they'd know how much time they had to help a lost pilot before he would be forced to land. So it felt kind of funny answering that question just after I'd told them I was landing right now. Why call at all? This airport closes up early, and I correctly assumed that everyone had already left for the day. In case the landing or its aftermath went sour, I wanted ambulances on the way.

There has been a 24/7 sheriff patrol at this airport since September 2001, so we had company within seconds after the forced landing. The sheriff's officer is on the lookout for terrorists, and he has watched hundreds or thousands of planes land at this airport. All the other ones taxi toward the buildings after they land. We stopped on the runway, shut our lights off, and ran away from the airplane PDQ. I can only imagine what he thought we were up to. He monitors the CTAF, but I had not used that frequency (preoccupied).

This is where I got another major dose of good luck, and a humbling lesson in human nature. Where I live, I would expect the police to take their information and leave us where they found us. We spent a couple of hours in the company of the Ocean County Sheriff's Department and the Berkeley Township Police, all of whom deserve high praise for their action. They went far beyond the call of duty, unasked, to make sure that we four strangers were taken care of that night (by the time they got done with their police business, it was dark and fairly chilly). They not only called several hotels until they found us a place to stay, they also drove us there. The Sheriff's Officer told us he was "risking his reputation," but he raided his troop's icebox to make us some sandwiches because he knew it had been a long time since lunch. Two little kids learned that not every ride in a troop car leads to a jail cell, as the men in uniform generally did all the things that we don't learn about by watching "Cops" on TV. They really are in it "to protect and serve." To all the police who read this, Thank You for the side of law enforcement that we usually never know about.

The airplane was not available for its scheduled activity on Monday - the annual inspection. I hope we find out what caused the engine to blow up, because if I did something bad I never want to do it again. It has been 1200 hours since major overhaul by Pine Mountain Aviation, a highly respected engine shop nearby in Danbury. (Recommended schedule is 2000 hours between overhauls.) Our flying club has tens of thousands of hours on about a dozen overhauls from this shop, with no problems at all. Including the accident engine, we have done all of these overhauls with new Millennium cylinders. We have had enough history with these engines to know that they make it to TBO with no significant intermediate attention required. This engine will be thoroughly inspected and I will report whatever I learn about the cause of its recent problem. The overhauler is at least as interested in the problem as I am, and I am very interested in the problem.

Passengers: The kids were great. Per my intention, they didn't know how serious the situation could have been until we were stopped on the ground and I told them this was a Real Emergency and they had to get far away from the airplane NOW. After the airplane didn't turn into a ball of flame, it just became a Great Adventure for them and they got a kick out of spending a night in a hotel and driving home in a brand-new car. The only psychological scar seems to be with Barbara's grandson, who was very upset that we had to complete the trip in a car (takes too long). He'll get over it.

Big lesson learned: One of my mentors, Bob Martens (FAA), says that if you have not practiced a forced landing in the past month you will blow it. I practice them every week, and now I truly know why I'm glad I do that.


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There is a dark side to the Lessons Learned. We drove around in New Jersey, where the law requires kids to use booster seats. So I used them in the airplane, too. A booster seat is just a gadget to put the child a little higher up, so the car's (or airplane's) own seat belt will secure him properly. In a Tiger, this arrangement puts the buckle in a place where the child cannot release it. This was also true in the car. I get a very creepy feeling thinking about a scenario where the adults in front are incapacitated in a crash, and the kids survive OK but can't get out of the flaming wreck because they're strapped in.


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Glossary (not everyone understands pilot-speak)
CTAF: Common Traffic Advisory Frequency, used by pilots to announce their position and intentions
TBO: Time Between Overhauls
VFR: Visual (not Instrument) Flight Rules. The pilot is free to fly the "scenic route."







 


the best cure for "wife ack" is to deploy chaff:    $...$$....$....$$$.....$ .....$$$.....$ ....$$

Offline Chairboy

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Inflight engine fire survival story
« Reply #1 on: May 27, 2005, 12:39:40 PM »
Scary!  Tough call on whether to do an emergency descent or the power off landing, I bet.  Wondering if the fire would spread before you get stopped would definately be on my mind.

I wonder if he shut off his fuel?

Great read, Wolf, thanks for sharing.  Sounds like your clubmate exhibited good airmanship.
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Offline Gunslinger

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Inflight engine fire survival story
« Reply #2 on: May 27, 2005, 12:48:25 PM »
thanks for the post wolf.  If you get it post the follow up inspection, I'd really like to know what cracked an engine block like that.

Offline JB73

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« Reply #3 on: May 27, 2005, 12:50:29 PM »
glad to hear all went well, and noone was injured

God was watching out sounds like
I don't know what to put here yet.

Offline Habu

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Inflight engine fire survival story
« Reply #4 on: May 27, 2005, 01:07:04 PM »
That guy was really lucky. To have a catastrophic failure within glide distance of an airfield especially when there was so much bad terrain around was just really really lucky.

I imagine that the engine was probably running very hot before the failure. The oil fire and bent rod seems to indicate that. The gauges read normal so I wonder if the gauge was accurate.

Offline Chairboy

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« Reply #5 on: May 27, 2005, 02:12:55 PM »
The more I read and think about flying, the more convinced I am that an EGT is a vital piece of equipment.

When I get/build a plane, that's definately going on the 'gotta have it' list.
"When fascism comes to America it will be wrapped in the flag and carrying a cross." - Sinclair Lewis

Offline Wolfala

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« Reply #6 on: May 27, 2005, 02:37:09 PM »
It had a digi egt with cyl temps on all


the best cure for "wife ack" is to deploy chaff:    $...$$....$....$$$.....$ .....$$$.....$ ....$$

Offline Chairboy

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Inflight engine fire survival story
« Reply #7 on: May 27, 2005, 02:43:45 PM »
Sure, but none of the planes I rent do.  :D  I wonder if they were telling a story that he didn't notice.  Might be interesting to ask him if they showed anything odd.  Might be that they just weren't in his scan pattern, even though they should have been after the RPM drop a few minutes earlier.
"When fascism comes to America it will be wrapped in the flag and carrying a cross." - Sinclair Lewis

Offline Wolfala

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Inflight engine fire survival story
« Reply #8 on: May 27, 2005, 03:51:27 PM »
The guy flying it is one of our check pilots. It was written by himself, so it says right there that there was a vibration with a 15 kt loss and oil pressure higher then normal. Have to wait to see what caused such a catastrophic failure. The day before I flew the same plane, nothing special about the flight - engine or otherwise.


the best cure for "wife ack" is to deploy chaff:    $...$$....$....$$$.....$ .....$$$.....$ ....$$

Offline Torque

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Inflight engine fire survival story
« Reply #9 on: May 27, 2005, 05:29:51 PM »
just goes to show, ah's oil leaks are overmodelled!

Offline LePaul

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« Reply #10 on: May 27, 2005, 05:40:01 PM »
My worry is having something like this happen at night, when there are not any such fields available.  We've got a lot of dark forest up here....eeek.

Offline Wolfala

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« Reply #11 on: May 27, 2005, 05:41:39 PM »
Quote
Originally posted by LePaul
My worry is having something like this happen at night, when there are not any such fields available.  We've got a lot of dark forest up here....eeek.


I flew up in Banger quite a lot the last few years. I basically coaxed myself into the notion that if anything happened, I was pretty much ****ed. Where you are, especially say 30 or 40 miles inland might as well be Siberia.

Wolfala


the best cure for "wife ack" is to deploy chaff:    $...$$....$....$$$.....$ .....$$$.....$ ....$$

Offline LePaul

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Inflight engine fire survival story
« Reply #12 on: May 27, 2005, 05:44:02 PM »
Give a shout the next time you are coming to Bangor.  Its a great field....huge to be exact.  An 11,400ft runway is nice!

Lots of nice places to sight see around here.  Trenton Airport, due south of Bangor is right by Bar Harbor/Mount Desert Island.

But asides that field, once you journey away, there isnt much to chose from....grab a sectional and see!

Offline spitfiremkv

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« Reply #13 on: May 27, 2005, 05:55:42 PM »
what if it was YOU who broke it??

Offline Wolfala

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Inflight engine fire survival story
« Reply #14 on: May 27, 2005, 06:14:01 PM »
Quote
Originally posted by spitfiremkv
what if it was YOU who broke it??


Well, as they said in the Marines, "Hurry up and wait!"


the best cure for "wife ack" is to deploy chaff:    $...$$....$....$$$.....$ .....$$$.....$ ....$$