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Aviation News Talk podcast

Shutdown Mag Checks, ADS-B solution alternatives, static wicks +GA News

Aviation News Talk podcast

Glass Cockpit Publishing

General, G1000, Leisure, Gps, Ifr, Glasscockpit, Safety, Sr20, Trescott, Flying, Tips, Cirrus, Aviation, News, Max, Sr22, Garmin, Waas, Perspective

4.8 • 730 Ratings

🗓️ 13 June 2017

⏱️ 43 minutes

🧾️ Download transcript

Summary

Please take the Aviation News Talk podcast 2017 Listener survey! Click here for the survey. In this podcast, I explain how to properly do a magneto ground check before engine shutdown, to assure you won’t have a hot prop if you move the propeller by hand. This is a followup to a much longer discussion on magneto and hot props in episode 13. You can Dictate a listener question from your phone and I’ll try to answer it on a future show, or send an email.

News Stories

  • Diesel Cessna Skyhawk JT-A Awarded FAA Certification
  • Saturday's Beechjet Flameout Marks Fifth in Type
  • Alternative bill to ATC Privatization introduced
  • NTSB Pilot shuts off one engine before fatal plane crash near Haines
  • New cataract-correcting replacement lens approved
  • Paris Airshow Preview
  • Lancair Brings Back Mako
  • Merlin PSA Quick-Build Kit Earns FAA 51% Approval
  • Navajo Strikes Gator In Orlando

    Plus listener email: We explain static electricity and how static wicks work to dissipate it from an aircraft, a listener asks why flying in IMC seems so different from flying under a hood, two pilots asks about which ADS-B alternative to install in their aircraft, a pilot asks how to stay current flying in four different airplanes, and a listener from Belgium ask why in the U.S. the FAA refers to pilot certificates instead of pilot licenses and flyers are called airmen and not pilots.

    In Flight Problems
    If an engine becomes rough during flight, it could be because one magneto has developed a timing problem. In that case, switch to the L and R positions to see if the engine runs better in one of those positions. If it does, leave the magneto switches or key in that position for the rest of the flight and report the problem to your mechanic.

    Shutdown Mag Check
    Some checklists say to switch the mag switches or key very briefly to the Off position, so you can hear if the engine is stopping. If it is, that verifies that both mags are properly grounded. Then before the engine quits, switch back to the Both position and shut down the engine properly by pulling the mixture to idle. If there’s a mag key, it’s important that you do this check by turning all the way to the Off position, and not just turn to the L and R positions, as some CFIs insist. Turning to the L and R positions checks part of the grounding system, but it doesn’t check whether the switch itself works in the Off position! It's not unusual for an older switch to become corroded and fail to work in one position, so definitely do the shutdown mag check by switching briefly to the Off position. Do the mag checks and engine shutdown procedures properly, and you will greatly enhance your safety when you move a prop.

Transcript

Click on a timestamp to play from that location

0:00.0

Hello, and thank you for joining me.

0:03.7

Coming up in the news, a very popular general aviation aircraft now has a jet fuel version.

0:09.5

There's an alternative bill to ATC privatization that's just been introduced in the House of Representatives.

0:15.3

And a GA aircraft in Florida counters a gator.

0:19.4

Plus, additional information about Magneto's and how to do a shutdown

0:22.5

mag check correctly. Some alternative ADSB solutions that our listeners are considering installing

0:28.6

in their aircraft, plus the largest batch of listener questions and emails we've ever had.

0:34.1

Welcome to Aviation News Talk, where we talk about general aviation. I'm Max Traskot and I'm here

0:39.8

to share my over 40 years of experience as a licensed pilot, author, and 2008 National Flight

0:45.0

Instructor of the Year to bring you news and safety tips to help you fly safely. And just a quick reminder,

0:50.2

the 2017 listener survey is live and later I'll tell you about a change I've already made to the website based on a survey input.

0:57.5

So if you have ideas on how you'd like to see this show improve, or if you just want to say, keep it the way it is, please take a few minutes to take the survey.

1:05.1

Go to aviationnewstalk.com slash survey, or you can get to it by clicking a link in the show notes.

1:11.7

I'll plan to keep the survey open through the end of June.

1:15.2

By the way, about 15% of survey respondents said they learned of the show through a friend.

1:19.7

So if you enjoy the show, please tell your friends.

1:22.6

All this and more, and the news starts now.

1:46.5

Well, almost every pilot has heard of the Cessna 172, but did you know there's a jet fuel version available now?

1:47.7

From Flying Magazine, after more than five years in development, the FAA and EASA, the European

1:53.9

Aviation Safety Agency, has certified the Cessna Turbo Skyhawk JTA, which is the jet fuel

2:00.2

version of the 172, with next generation Garmin G-1000

2:04.1

NXI avionics. We talked about those a while back. That's the new version of the G-1000 with a process

...

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