I did a search on icing and came back with a few comments related to carb icing but nothing on airframe icing. My curiosity lies in how those fuel cap vents do in inadvertent icing. I am planning on an IFR legal bird. . Im religious about staying out of known ice but have encountered unforecast ice several times in my flying life. I dont really have a concern about the airframe because I act NOW to get out, its just losing my entire fuel supply due to all the fuel caps vents freezing over. If I were that unfortunate, I would be all over the rudder to try to force fuel out the vent and clear the plug. But I may overthinking something thats never happened. Anybody out there willing to share icing experience in a Bearhawk?
My worst personal story was on a training flight for my instrument rating in my old Mooney. The instructor had me file in the clouds. There was no forecast or known icing. We picked up ice at our filed altitude and I requested minimum vectoring altitude to try to get out of the clouds. It did not get us out of the clouds, but I did succeed in slowing/stopping the rather rapid build up ice. I had lost 30 knots in airspeed. I shot the approach into the airport and we got out of the plane. We had 1/2 inch on the leading edge of the wings and 5/8 on the tail. Since that time decades ago I have never picked up more than a trace of ice. Another Mooney pilot years later tested the limits of the airframe picking up 2” on the leading edge all while listening to the stall warning and figuring he was going to die. He snapped photos showing the incredible build up only after he saw it starting to melt off. Okay thats my icing “ice breaker”. Anybody care to share Bearhawk experiences?
My worst personal story was on a training flight for my instrument rating in my old Mooney. The instructor had me file in the clouds. There was no forecast or known icing. We picked up ice at our filed altitude and I requested minimum vectoring altitude to try to get out of the clouds. It did not get us out of the clouds, but I did succeed in slowing/stopping the rather rapid build up ice. I had lost 30 knots in airspeed. I shot the approach into the airport and we got out of the plane. We had 1/2 inch on the leading edge of the wings and 5/8 on the tail. Since that time decades ago I have never picked up more than a trace of ice. Another Mooney pilot years later tested the limits of the airframe picking up 2” on the leading edge all while listening to the stall warning and figuring he was going to die. He snapped photos showing the incredible build up only after he saw it starting to melt off. Okay thats my icing “ice breaker”. Anybody care to share Bearhawk experiences?
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