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Pitot tube?

 
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alfolavf(at)online.no
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PostPosted: Mon Jan 30, 2006 10:09 pm    Post subject: Pitot tube? Reply with quote

Quote:
Hi fellow RV-7 Builders!

I live in Norway and am almost finished with the empennage of my RV-7A.
I'm just about ready to start with my QB-wings and considering different types of pitot tubes.
Since it's cold up here, I've to have a heated one.

Is it a type or brand which most Rv-builders use the most?

Best regards Alf Olav Frog




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aurbo(at)ak.net
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PostPosted: Mon Jan 30, 2006 10:37 pm    Post subject: Pitot tube? Reply with quote

Alf,

I live in Alaska and it is cold here, -10 today, you do not have to have a
heated pitot tube. The ones from Van's work just fine.

Mike Ice
Anchorage, Alaska

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Skykingjfg(at)aol.com
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PostPosted: Tue Jan 31, 2006 3:54 am    Post subject: Pitot tube? Reply with quote

You won't need one unless you plan to fly IFR in the clouds. However, if you decide you want one the cheapest I've found is either Falcon or Dynon. Also Gretz is offering a new model at a reasonable price.

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dan(at)rvproject.com
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PostPosted: Tue Jan 31, 2006 6:14 am    Post subject: Pitot tube? Reply with quote

There's no requirement for a heated pitot tube, even for IFR.  It's simply not required under Part 91.
 
23.1323 requires a heated pitot tube: "(d) If certification for instrument flight rules or flight in icing conditions is requested, each airspeed system must have a heated pitot tube or an equivalent means of preventing malfunction due to icing."
 
However, our airplanes are not required to conform to Part 23.  Plus, the way the modern operating limitations are structured, we don't have to request specific "certification" under IFR.  The operating limitations simply specify that we need to conform to 91.205:
 

"(Cool After completion of phase I flight testing, unless appropriately equipped for night and/or instrument flight in accordance with § 91.205, this aircraft is to be operated under VFR, day only."
 
That said, you'd be remiss to do any real IFR flying anywhere near the freezing level without one.  I have warm (hot?) fuzzies as a result of having one, but I want to clarify that it's not a hard and fast requirement for amateur built aircraft in the U.S.
 
)_( Dan
RV-7 N714D (802 hours)
http://www.rvproject.com
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slipstream13(at)earthlink
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PostPosted: Tue Jan 31, 2006 9:43 am    Post subject: Pitot tube? Reply with quote

Dynon's pitot tube remains unheated.  For several years they worked on a heated version, but apparently they've finally given up on the project -- Last word I heard is that they have no plans to bring a heated tube to market.
 
Brooks
N513BW -- Waiting for warmer temps to cut my canopy!
 
[i]----


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frank.hinde(at)hp.com
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PostPosted: Tue Jan 31, 2006 10:13 am    Post subject: Pitot tube? Reply with quote

Bummer!...Oh well at least there is no point in waiting.
 
As to the canopy I PERSONALLY would just cut it....Use a local fan heater to warm the underside for a few minutes but other than that if you don't want to wait just do it...I have cut it quite sucessfully in as low as 40F no problem.
 
Oh by the way, you can also sand out scratches with wet and dry and polish it back clear with metal polish pretty easily as well
 
Frank

From: owner-rv7-list-server(at)matronics.com [mailto:owner-rv7-list-server(at)matronics.com] On Behalf Of Brooks Wolfe
Sent: Tuesday, January 31, 2006 9:41 AM
To: rv7-list(at)matronics.com
Subject: Re: Pitot tube?

Dynon's pitot tube remains unheated.  For several years they worked on a heated version, but apparently they've finally given up on the project -- Last word I heard is that they have no plans to bring a heated tube to market.
 
Brooks
N513BW -- Waiting for warmer temps to cut my canopy!
 
[i]----


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dhall(at)donka.net
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PostPosted: Sun Feb 05, 2006 7:32 pm    Post subject: Pitot tube? Reply with quote

While we're on the subject, I just installed my Gretz Aero Pitot Tube. It's
pretty cool. It comes with a sensor that only draws power when pitot heat
is really needed. It has led indicators to let you know when the pitot is
cold or ok, and when it's actually heating.

Here's some pics:
http://donka.net/gallery/view_photo.php?set_albumName=rv7leftwing&id=DSC0542
0

I suppose this pitot tube is on the pricey side, but what the heck. I will
fly IFR and this will make me feel better. Around here, I know of other RV
builders that get old Cessna pitots on the cheap, and those melt ice just as
good.

******************************************
Don Hall
N517DG (registered)
rv7 wings, fuse on the way!
http:\\donka.net\rv7project.html
******************************************

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skikrazi(at)centurytel.ne
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PostPosted: Mon Feb 06, 2006 6:00 pm    Post subject: Pitot tube? Reply with quote

I was thinking about installing a heated pitot tube when building my RV-7A,
but then I got to thinking. If flying into conditions that would cause me
to need a heated pitot tube, I might also need de-ice boots on prop and
wings......so I said to myself, forget it.
Chuck Imken
200 hours on N735RV

Do not archive.

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markc(at)conotech.com
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PostPosted: Tue Feb 07, 2006 10:03 am    Post subject: Pitot tube? Reply with quote

Imken wrote:

Quote:


I was thinking about installing a heated pitot tube when building my RV-7A,
but then I got to thinking. If flying into conditions that would cause me
to need a heated pitot tube, I might also need de-ice boots on prop and
wings......so I said to myself, forget it.
Chuck Imken
200 hours on N735RV





My advice: if you are expecting to do any flying in instrument

conditions, get a heated pitot tube.

-Mark Conover

RV9 (emp)

Quote:










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skikrazi(at)centurytel.ne
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PostPosted: Tue Feb 07, 2006 7:53 pm    Post subject: Pitot tube? Reply with quote

My advice: if you are going to fly any RV in instrument conditions without
a heated pitot tube (I do all the time), do get a good weather forecast and
don't fly in anticipated icing conditions. Having a heated pitot tube
without capability to shed ice from prop and airframe, the heated pitot tube
will merely give you the capability to know how fast you are going to hit
the ground.

Do not archive.

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markc(at)conotech.com
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PostPosted: Tue Feb 07, 2006 10:29 pm    Post subject: Pitot tube? Reply with quote

(pardon while I briefly veer a bit off topic)

Say, Imken, do you fly in the US Southeast? I'm curious about
instrument flying in the various parts of North America. Do you get
much ice at lower altitudes? While I flew VFR in Texas a lot, my
experience with IMC has so far been restricted to the Pacific Northwest,
having moved to Seattle ten years ago. Our wx briefings routinely
refer to some amount of ice in the forecast; so, we tend to have a keen
interest in pireps.

(returning to topic)

As to whether to even bother with pitot heat if your airplane can't shed
ice, I figure the pitot tube will plug up before flying surfaces are
affected. If in IMC, I sure would prefer not to lose the airspeed
indicator. Perhaps in these days of GPS, losing the airspeed
indicator when at altitude is not as dicey as it once was.

Imken wrote:

[quote]

My advice: if you are going to fly any RV in instrument conditions without
a heated pitot tube (I do all the time), do get a good weather forecast and
don't fly in anticipated icing conditions. Having a heated pitot tube
without capability to shed ice from prop and airframe, the heated pitot tube
will merely give you the capability to know how fast you are going to hit
the ground.

Do not archive.

--


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highflight1(at)gmail.com
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PostPosted: Wed Feb 08, 2006 3:30 am    Post subject: Pitot tube? Reply with quote

Absolutely, Mark, and I was waiting for someone else to point this out. I didn't want to mention it myself because my IFR rating is in the future and I will be flying light IFR in my '7A so perhaps I'm not considered qualified to say this. And before the argument about "light" IFR gets started again, it simply means (to me) a personal requirement for much higher minimums and a mental attitude that more quickly allows a cancellation or diversion from flight plan.
But I don't get the fascination with a heated pitot tube in an RV if one is going to have an IFR GPS on board. At altitude, if you lose your pitot intput from ice, your GPS will be plenty accurate to keep you safe. I'd worry more about ice on wings and prop and get myself out of there as quickly as possible. If you're blind and at altitude and neither you nor your FAA weather helpers can find some clear air for you to head for, then as far as I'm concerned, that's a flight you should have made in a fully booted aircraft anyway.
For landing, using GPS airspeed and your usual power and flap settings for putting the wheels on the runway will get you down albeit a little fast if you want to be on the safe side. If you get to 100 feet off the ground on approach and can't see the ground during your actual landing, you got a lot more problems than an AWOL pitot tube.
 
Vern

 
On 2/8/06, Mark Conover <markc(at)conotech.com (markc(at)conotech.com)> wrote:
Quote:
--> RV7-List message posted by: Mark Conover <markc(at)conotech.com (markc(at)conotech.com)>

(pardon while I briefly veer a bit off topic)

Say, Imken, do you fly in the US Southeast?   I'm curious about
instrument flying in the various parts of North America.   Do you get
much ice at lower altitudes?   While I flew VFR in Texas a lot, my
experience with IMC has so far been restricted to the Pacific Northwest,
having moved to Seattle ten years ago.   Our wx briefings routinely
refer to some amount of ice in the forecast; so, we tend to have a keen
interest in pireps.

(returning to topic)

As to whether to even bother with pitot heat if your airplane can't shed
ice,  I figure the pitot tube will plug up before flying surfaces are
affected.  If in IMC, I sure would prefer not to lose the airspeed
indicator.    Perhaps in these days of GPS, losing the airspeed
indicator when at altitude is not as dicey as it once was.



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dwight(at)openweave.org
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PostPosted: Wed Feb 08, 2006 6:00 am    Post subject: Pitot tube? Reply with quote

On Wed Feb 8 01:23:34 2006, Mark Conover wrote :
Quote:
[ ... snip ... ]
As to whether to even bother with pitot heat if your airplane can't shed
ice, I figure the pitot tube will plug up before flying surfaces are
affected. If in IMC, I sure would prefer not to lose the airspeed
indicator. Perhaps in these days of GPS, losing the airspeed
indicator when at altitude is not as dicey as it once was.

Just my $0.02 worth ... I agree that a pitot will ice up before the flying
surfaces do, and I do NOT want to be in IMC with no airspeed. Your thought
about a GPS replacing the pitot/AS is interesting ... but I'm not sure it
is valid.

If you have ever had to practice using needle/ball/airspeed for recovery
from an unusual attitude you'll remember how critical that AS is to getting
the plane back under control. I am not sure it would be possible with the
-lag- you get from the GPS. I fear that lag might cause repeated overshoot
of the horizon and make the situation unsavable.

Furthermore, the GPS shows groundspeed and NOT airspeed, so it isn't measuring
the right thing anyway. That makes me feel the suggestions that you can use
GPS as an approach speed reference (remember, we are talking about a pitot
failing due to ice in IMC) are questionable to me. It would work if you knew
the winds and made the right adjustment .... but .... if you have a strong
head/tail wind the speeds on the GPS, without adjustment, are NOT going to
be right. If you are flying any non-precision approach I don't see how you
could possibly get (for instance) the missed approach point timed correctly
if time was the only way to identify the miss.

Obviously, if you are stuck with the GPS as the only speed reference then you
do what you can. Do remember what it is actually measuring before using the
numbers blindly though.

I'm putting in a heated pitot even if it costs me. I'm also putting in a
traditional ASI and altimeter, and will be using a TruTrak AP head as a
turn coordinator. This will be to back up a Dynon as I (being a software
engineer myself) don't yet trust the electronic goodies *totally*.

Again, this is just my $0.02 worth. Everyone has to assess their own level
of risk and how much of that risk they are willing to accept. Me ... I'm a
cautious pilot and it shows.

-- Dwight (do not archive)


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dan(at)rvproject.com
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PostPosted: Wed Feb 08, 2006 7:18 am    Post subject: Pitot tube? Reply with quote

At the risk of repeating myself, if you're flying with an EFIS, if the pitot
ices over it may not just be airspeed that you lose. You might lose
reliable attitude indication as well (ouch!). Find out if your EFIS is
dependent on airspeed and what it will do if airspeed goes away. If it will
do bad things, then I would consider pitot heat even more valuable in that
case than if you just have steam gauges.

)_( Dan
RV-7 N714D (812 hours)
http://www.rvproject.com

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markc(at)conotech.com
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PostPosted: Wed Feb 08, 2006 7:44 am    Post subject: Pitot tube? Reply with quote

Dwight Frye wrote:

Quote:

Just my $0.02 worth ... I agree that a pitot will ice up before the flying


surfaces do, and I do NOT want to be in IMC with no airspeed. Your thought
about a GPS replacing the pitot/AS is interesting ... but I'm not sure it
is valid.

If you have ever had to practice using needle/ball/airspeed for recovery
from an unusual attitude you'll remember how critical that AS is to getting
the plane back under control. I am not sure it would be possible with the
-lag- you get from the GPS. I fear that lag might cause repeated overshoot
of the horizon and make the situation unsavable.

Furthermore, the GPS shows groundspeed and NOT airspeed, so it isn't measuring
the right thing anyway. That makes me feel the suggestions that you can use
GPS as an approach speed reference (remember, we are talking about a pitot
failing due to ice in IMC) are questionable to me. It would work if you knew
the winds and made the right adjustment .... but .... if you have a strong
head/tail wind the speeds on the GPS, without adjustment, are NOT going to
be right. If you are flying any non-precision approach I don't see how you
could possibly get (for instance) the missed approach point timed correctly
if time was the only way to identify the miss.

Obviously, if you are stuck with the GPS as the only speed reference then you
do what you can. Do remember what it is actually measuring before using the
numbers blindly though.

I'm putting in a heated pitot even if it costs me. I'm also putting in a
traditional ASI and altimeter, and will be using a TruTrak AP head as a
turn coordinator. This will be to back up a Dynon as I (being a software
engineer myself) don't yet trust the electronic goodies *totally*.

Again, this is just my $0.02 worth. Everyone has to assess their own level
of risk and how much of that risk they are willing to accept. Me ... I'm a
cautious pilot and it shows.

-- Dwight (do not archive)




Dwight, like you, I'll be installing a heated pitot tube. The cost is
certainly worth it to me.

About ten years ago, I had a GPS failure exactly when I really needed it
most. I had stupidly flown into a bad storm -- an experience which
provoked my getting an instrument rating. As a new arrival to the
Seattle area, I did not realize how very quickly autumn storms can move
into this region. Unlike the wide open spaces of my native Texas, it's
easy to get stuck between the nasty storms moving in from Puget Sound
and the Cascade mountain range.

Also being a techno geek by trade (and general nature), I like pairing
the latest gadgets that are now available at a pretty low cost (I can't
believe how inexpensive is the TruTrak), with traditional steam gauges.

-Mark


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skikrazi(at)centurytel.ne
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PostPosted: Wed Feb 08, 2006 6:08 pm    Post subject: Pitot tube? Reply with quote

I agree with Dan that losing reliable attitude indication can be an ouch.
If my 430 and Grand Rapids EFIS ever do go belly up, for backup I use
Control Vision's Anywhere Map, Anywhere Attitude, and Anywhere Weather and
know of one pilot who used it to get out of IMC when he had a complete power
failure. The Control Vision stuff has about a two-hour separate battery.
Chuck
N735RV

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brad20j(at)yahoo.com
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PostPosted: Thu Feb 09, 2006 10:02 am    Post subject: Pitot tube? Reply with quote

Remember that your airspeed is one of the most important instruments in unusual attitude recovery.  It's even more critical if you're iced up, since your stall speeds will go up by an undetermined amount, Vy and Vx will change too, as will your power required to stay level/climb/etc., so your normal power/attitude/configuration settings won't be very reliable.  Also, you certainly don't want to mess around too much with flaps if iced up, lest you tempt a tail stall.
 
Re GPS as a substitute for airspeed, icing is most likely when you have vertical air currents.  Windy, turbulent days, when they're IMC, can have a bunch of fast accumulating ice.  These are the days in which ground speed is at its poorest as a substitute for airspeed.  In a Mooney, on a winter's day with strong mountain waves, I was cruising at an average of 160 KTAS, but having to "climb" and "descend" through the waves to maintain altitude.  The ground speed upwind varied from 120 kts to 70 kts.  When I turned around, I saw 235 kts ground speed in the rising air.  While I wouldn't have been up there had it been IMC due to the very high potential for icing that would have been present, there's no way that the GPS ground speed would have helped me get a feel for airspeed.
 
If I'm going to be flying anywhere near potential icing, an airspeed indicator is not something I'd want to sacrifice.  This is even if you have an obvious out, like clear air below, because ATC in some parts of the country is often fairly inflexible in allowing you to change routes or altitudes, like in the northeast corridor.
 
I presently fly an icing certified plane.  It's amazing how efficient sharp protrusions are at collecting ice.  The thermometer probe is an excellent ice catcher.  I would imagine that a cold pitot tube would be even better.
 
>>      But I don't get the fascination with a heated pitot tube in an RV if one is
Quote:
>      going to have an IFR GPS on board. At altitude, if you lose your pitot
>      intput from ice, your GPS will be plenty accurate to keep you safe. I'd
>      worry more about ice on wings and prop and get myself out of there as
>>     quickly as possible. If you're blind and at altitude and neither you nor

Quote:
>      your FAA weather helpers can find some clear air for you to head for, then
>      as far as I'm concerned, that's a flight you should have made in a fully
>      booted aircraft anyway.
>      For landing, using GPS airspeed and your usual power and flap settings for
>      putting the wheels on the runway will get you down albeit a little fast if
>      you want to be on the safe side. If you get to 100 feet off the ground on
>      approach and can't see the ground during your actual landing, you got a lot
>      more problems than an AWOL pitot tube.

 

Relax. Yahoo! Mail [url=http://us.rd.yahoo.com/mail_us/taglines/viruscc/*http://communications.yahoo.com/features.php?page=221]virus scanning[/url] helps detect nasty viruses!


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