by Zach Grant L1011jock » Wed Dec 28, 2011 10:42 pm
Mark,
Very typical. If you do not have an alternate static port plumbed into the system, I highly suggest you contact your local shop and have it done. The Comanche static system, especially the pre 65 birds with the flush ports, has been known to become totally blocked with water to the point of freezing all of the static needles where they are, which is very dangerous when shooting any approach that does not have hard verticle guidance such as an ILS or LPV. It will also cause your airspeed to become unreliable. As you decend the bubble of water stuck near the port usually gets sucked into the system, creating a hydraulic lock, and usually results in the ASI still indicating significant airspeed when the plane is parked on the ramp. Opening the alternate static will equalize the pressure with cabin air and all indications will return to somewhat normal, if somewhat less accurate than normal, but you will not fly into the ground thinking you are still at 5000 feet! The encoder will be fooled also in this scenario, so ATC will think you are still at your assigned altitude (this brings in all sorts of traffic conflict issues as well). I know you can fly pitch and power, but trust me, when this happens, it takes a while for you to not trust the instruments and do something else. I speak from experience. Just before breaking the glass on my VSI, I figured out I could use my GPS derived altitude and groundspeed to succesfully get vectored to an ILS, and flew it to minimums, disregarding the pitot/static information presented, and relying on known power settings and configurations, while crossreferencing ground speed. The next time I flew I had an alternate static source, and have had to employ it on several occasions since in heavy rain.
-Zach
"Keep it above 5 feet and don't do nuthin dumb!"