A26 Special K wrote:
CAP Flyer, we don't have the black boxes for the prop controllers for reverse and would probably not be able to keep them running even if we did have them. Our props were locked out upon overhaul. They can't go into reverse. Neither do we need them to do so. We will never land on a runway shorter than 5000 ft. As low as our blades are to the concrete, it would only chew up the blades and put more stress on them to boot. Our brakes are newly overhauled. So we elected to go without reverse. As for the accident I referred to in the earlier post, go look at Aaron's website for the pictures of it. According to the pilot, one prop reversed when he hit the arming switch on short final. Once armed, nothing is supposed to happen until the pilot selects reverse after touchdown. Only it didn't work that way in this instance. The only thing saved was the cockpit and that is what Aaron's museum in the UK is restoring. It is just a risk we would rather avoid. That's our thinking. JR
JR, I understand the thinking and don't pan it. Again, my concern isn't whether you use it or not, it's whether you're really reducing the risk of inflight reverse by doing so. I'd also be interested to see under what STC or approved procedure the lockout was done, because the prop model doesn't come in a "non-reversing" version and there wasn't anything in the maintenance manuals that I can remember (although I didn't get too deep into them when doing the work with Air Tahoma since that wasn't my primary job). Not that I think they did anything wrong, I just never saw a modification for it and find these kinds of things interesting to see how they do it. Air Tahoma used those props in daily service as recently as 2009 and never had any issues with the system and the boxes were never a problem. We had more issues with bad mags and carbon seals (had 4 of them delivered either with bad points or bad carbon seals but with yellow tags once) than prop issues.