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#1
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ALERT: Gear-up light comes on with doors open!
Yep, you read that right. Happened Sunday in what could have been a tragic accident.
Took off in my 1973 337G out of Miami, headed over open waters to the Bahamas. All looked well, but after a while it seemed as if the climb was more sluggish than usual. I had a full load and wondered if I had miscalculated it and was overloaded. I looked around, engines looked good (manifold pressure, RPM, fuel flow, EGT), yellow gear-up light was on. Nothing seemed amiss. Could the props be losing "bite"? Am I indeed overloaded? We reached cruise altitude, configured aircraft (cowl flaps, RPM) and when airspeed settled I noticed I was about 25 MPH slower than usual, doing 125 instead of 150. Looked again at everything, found nothing, and was now considering turning back -- remember I'm over open waters, nowhere to land in an emergency. That's when I looked out to the small convex mirror I have under the left wing, pointed slightly backwards so I can see the rear engine (born of my concern about a possible engine fire back there). The smaller, longish main gear door under the cabin was partially open and -- worse -- the larger, parachute-like door behind the cabin were mostly or completely open. In my aircraft it's not an engine driven hydraulic pump that operates the gear but an electric power-pack, and the circuit breaker had popped after the gear had stowed but before the doors had closed. The troublesome point is that the design turns the gear-up light on when the gear -- not the doors -- are locked. Had I lost an engine, it's doubtful I would have been able to maintain altitude with the doors open. Please be alert to this. In my case I simply reset the circuit breaker and the doors closed without a hitch. Gear function was normal on landing and yesterday on both take-off and landing. Ernie |
#2
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Ernie
Check the circuit breaker, could be weak. Power pack motor may be compromising the symptom too. Circuit breaker is cheaper to try first. We found on one system that the accumulater pressure was weak. Would cause electrical load and trip out systems. Find it under the floor in the center.
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Herb R Harney 1968 337C Flying the same Skymaster for 47 years |
#3
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Thanks, Herb. I know what the problem is: low battery. I hadn't flown in almost a month, engine barely started. It has happened before, and I normally wait 5 or 10 minutes into the climb before retraction when I know the battery is low, to give it a chance to charge. This time I plain forgot.
But the key point in my message is NOT why doors didn't close. It's that the gear-up light can come on -- giving you a false sense that all is well -- and leave you flying with the doors wide open. Ernie |
#4
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Thanks for the info Erinie. I'm glad everything turned out well for you. Chalk it up to a learning experience. I am certainly filing this one into my memory bank as I fly my own plane (which as I am sure you know, is identical to yours).
Ed ![]() |
#5
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I don't know if the battery would be the cause of that or not. I sounds to me like there could be other areas of the system that warrant inspection. Battery's are something we all take for granted. If it starts it must be good but what happens if the alternator system goes blink? How long is your battery going to last to get you back to the ground? Something that I have thought a lot more about and especially after reading the article from the link below. A simple battery minder will help to extend the life of a battery especially if it gets low use. It has caused me to reconsider my complacency about batteries.
http://www.avweb.com/news/features/K...g221073-1.html
__________________
Herb R Harney 1968 337C Flying the same Skymaster for 47 years |
#6
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I "recondition" the battery every 6 - 9 months by adding distilled water and trickle charging at a constant 28.4 Volts. For the first 2 - 3 months after that, the gear breaker never pops. It also never pops if the aircraft is used regularly, even if reconditioning hasn't been done for a while. And it never pops at the end of a flight. In short, it pops only on retraction on the first flight after the aircraft has been unused for weeks and if the battery has not had reconditioning for a while. So, yes, I think it's the battery.
Ernie |
#7
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I've had gear door problems occur on both my D and F models. Because of the somewhat unreliable operation of this type of system (similar to the 210), I've made it a habit (part of my unofficial checklist) to confirm in my convex mirrors the gear has fully retracted and doors closed after raising the gear handle. Also (only applicable on pre-73 models), I keep my hand on the gear handle until it drops into the neutral detent and I know it's completed its cycle. There's been a few times the gear handle stayed up and the pump kept running and didn't realize it until I could smell the pump starting to overheat.
__________________
Jim Smith N555MD 1969 T337D |
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