Meatservo wrote:the devil-may-care Swordfish prevail, or our Zero-Tolerance colleagues?
Devil-may-care...? Hardly.
The difference between a
little ice, and
more than a little is clearly defined by the "zero-tolerance" academics who have never flown in the real world, and have "all the answers". A DC3, 99, King Air, Twotter, and a Jetstream, all have their own definition of what's a little ice. And having flown them all for 'a long time' before all this Contamination awareness was thrust in our faces every year (the same old message, year after year), I can attest to the unbelievable capabilities of each type to fly with
a little ice on it.
You just don't rotate aggressively, you rotate with as much speed as the runway will permit, you don't pitch up like a homesick angel, and you monitor what you can see on the wings till it burns off. Of course these techniques were never spelled out in our annual Icing Training - in fact I don't ever recall seeing this being suggested as a solution to your immediate woes.
And I wasn't referring to places where you can get deiced at home, or in a major center, with resources and facilities,
KAG. I was referring to going on a trip in pitch black dark, new moon, -5° all over the Great Slave region, where you land at Armpit, NWT, which is a 2-mile drive from the town, to medivac a critically injured patient where delay is intolerable.
Sure there are options - the least desirable of which is to wait till you can enforce the "clean" concept to the standards which we are all taught. And as for some wisecrack suggesting my failure to find a 15' ladder and do the tail as being "
lazy"...regrettably that underscores your lack of familiarity with these Northern airports and the facilities available in the middle of the night. You'd be lucky enough to find a
suitable broom, for God's sake!
I really hate to admit it, but sometimes, you simply do your best with what you've got at hand, then depart with
a little ice.