10 Jun 2025, 03:00 [ UTC - 5; DST ]
|
|
Page 1 of 1
|
[ 11 posts ] |
|
Username Protected |
Message |
Username Protected
|
Post subject: Weird Eclipse Statements Posted: 29 Apr 2016, 11:16 |
|
 |

|
|
 |
Joined: 02/26/11 Posts: 483 Post Likes: +289 Location: Fort Worth, TX
|
|
I was reading the SF-50 thread and noticed that someone posted this excerpt below. I know there are plenty of eclipse threads here, but this didnt seem to directly fit into any so I thought I would start a new thread about what is said below. Is this really accurate?? Surely it is a typo or something. I can't imagine either of the below statements to be true. Quote: 7.6.2 The second special characteristic is that the EA-500 engines cannot be shut down in the event of a total loss of electrical power. With both generators off line and all battery power depleted, the engines cannot be shut down with the engine selector switches or fire/armed switches. The EA-500 engine thrust will be fixed at the last requested fuel flow setting based on thrust lever angle (TLA) used at that time. Although this situation is adequately covered in the AFM emergency procedures, it merits being listed as a special flight characteristic. If this emergency occurs in flight, the aircraft must be landed before battery power is depleted.
7.6.3 The third special characteristic for training providers involves changes in aircraft performance with the ice protection equipment ON. There is a zero climb performance at 15,000 feet with all engines operating and ice protection equipment ON. If one engine fails with ice protection equipment ON, the aircraft may be unable to climb as low as 5,000 feet.
|
|
Top |
|
Username Protected
|
Post subject: Re: Weird Eclipse Statements Posted: 29 Apr 2016, 11:42 |
|
 |

|
|
Joined: 11/03/08 Posts: 16243 Post Likes: +27289 Location: Peachtree City GA / Stoke-On-Trent UK
Aircraft: A33
|
|
5000ft, just like an apache on one engine
|
|
Top |
|
Username Protected
|
Post subject: Re: Weird Eclipse Statements Posted: 29 Apr 2016, 11:44 |
|
 |

|
|
Joined: 11/09/13 Posts: 1910 Post Likes: +927 Location: KCMA
Aircraft: Aero Commander 980
|
|
It's beats the SF50 OEI rate!
|
|
Top |
|
Username Protected
|
Post subject: Re: Weird Eclipse Statements Posted: 29 Apr 2016, 12:10 |
|
 |

|

|
Joined: 12/09/07 Posts: 3836 Post Likes: +1906 Location: Camarillo CA
|
|
Username Protected wrote: Quote: 7.6.2 The second special characteristic is that the EA-500 engines cannot be shut down in the event of a total loss of electrical power. With both generators off line and all battery power depleted, the engines cannot be shut down with the engine selector switches or fire/armed switches. The EA-500 engine thrust will be fixed at the last requested fuel flow setting based on thrust lever angle (TLA) used at that time. Although this situation is adequately covered in the AFM emergency procedures, it merits being listed as a special flight characteristic. If this emergency occurs in flight, the aircraft must be landed before battery power is depleted.
That is an accurate statement. There is absolutely NO control over the engines with the electrical power off. I figured if I had a electrical failure, or shut down the electrics, the ONLY way to get it on the ground is to run to fuel exhaustion, and dead stick it, no flaps. Not as scary as it sounds, actually. I did it in practice a few times. The flight controls are always full manual, the gear has a manual extension mode. That's all you'd need - provided you've got good VFR. You'd have an entirely dark airplane, and I mean DARK, right down to NO instruments, no radios, no lights.
|
|
Top |
|
Username Protected
|
Post subject: Re: Weird Eclipse Statements Posted: 03 May 2016, 14:36 |
|
 |

|
|
Joined: 01/13/10 Posts: 51 Post Likes: +38 Location: Arlington, TX
|
|
Username Protected wrote: Yup true statement
You must undo the nose bonnet and hook up 24 volts to shut the motors down or unplug some cannon plugs from the motor or run it out of gas on the ground. But all low probability events unless your batteries are really bad. Engine heat is rarely used and zaps 2-3% N2 speed . Almost never needed this or windshield heat. You can kill the fuel manually at the back of the engine (on the ground of course). Pratt did want a mechanical fuel shut off in the cockpit but Vern didn't.
_________________ Darryl Taylor General Manager, Air Power, Inc. dtaylor@airpowerinc.com
|
|
Top |
|
Username Protected
|
Post subject: Re: Weird Eclipse Statements Posted: 03 May 2016, 22:46 |
|
 |

|
|
Joined: 05/23/08 Posts: 6060 Post Likes: +710 Location: CMB7, Ottawa, Canada
Aircraft: TBM - C185 - T206
|
|
What ? no climb with deice on? How good is an aircraft that wont climb in ice ?
_________________ Former Baron 58 owner. Pistons engines are for tractors.
Marc Bourdon
|
|
Top |
|
Username Protected
|
Post subject: Re: Weird Eclipse Statements Posted: 04 May 2016, 00:17 |
|
 |

|
|
Joined: 12/03/14 Posts: 20306 Post Likes: +25445 Company: Ciholas, Inc Location: KEHR
Aircraft: C560V
|
|
Username Protected wrote: Are the 5K' and 15K' limitations with deice accurate also? The single engine service ceiling is FL350. No way turning on deice with one engine lowers that to 5,000 ft. It's bogus. Mike C.
_________________ Email mikec (at) ciholas.com
|
|
Top |
|
|
Page 1 of 1
|
[ 11 posts ] |
|
|
You cannot post new topics in this forum You cannot reply to topics in this forum You cannot edit your posts in this forum You cannot delete your posts in this forum You cannot post attachments in this forum
|
Terms of Service | Forum FAQ | Contact Us
BeechTalk, LLC is the quintessential Beechcraft Owners & Pilots Group providing a
forum for the discussion of technical, practical, and entertaining issues relating to all Beech aircraft. These include
the Bonanza (both V-tail and straight-tail models), Baron, Debonair, Duke, Twin Bonanza, King Air, Sierra, Skipper, Sport, Sundowner,
Musketeer, Travel Air, Starship, Queen Air, BeechJet, and Premier lines of airplanes, turboprops, and turbojets.
BeechTalk, LLC is not affiliated or endorsed by the Beechcraft Corporation, its subsidiaries, or affiliates.
Beechcraft™, King Air™, and Travel Air™ are the registered trademarks of the Beechcraft Corporation.
Copyright© BeechTalk, LLC 2007-2025
|
|
|
|