Marc_J._Zeitlin
Active Member
In your opinion. You're welcome to disagree, but I don't see how you can just declare my opinion "invalid".Valid point - I've found ice in my RV on 3 occasions in just over 700 hours - never by choice. Your concern about autotrim in an ice situation is valid, but suggesting that we never use autotrim in IMC because of the possibility of an out-of-trim airplane being handed back to the pilot is simply not valid.
I agree that autotrim is nice. But I spend about 0.001% of my flight time adjusting trim when flying IFR/IMC (or VFR/VMC, for that matter). I trim for climb, then trim for cruise, then trim for descent, then trim for approach speed, then trim for the missed approach climb (if necessary). That's five trim events in a flight, and each one takes about 2 - 5 seconds. I'd hardly call the time savings a huge benefit. To me, the increased awareness of the aircraft's trim state by performing the trimming myself more than offsets the minuscule amount of time it takes to trim. And in fact, if the plane's only a bit out of trim when the system asks me to trim up/down/whatever, it's perfectly happy to sit there for however long it takes me to finish the other things I was doing (writing clearances or whatever) before it annunciates the need for a trim change in the audio stream.First, the autotrim is such a useful feature in IMC flight, and so workload-reducing in a single-pilot IFR cockpit, that the benefits would be hard to overstate and most certainly outweigh the drawbacks.
I'd be interested to hear why you believe that the autotrim is such a huge workload reducer. The A/P is most CERTAINLY a huge workload reducer in a single pilot IMC environment - that I agree with 100%. But the autotrim? Not so much.
Pretty harsh. The Colgan crew - a highly trained set of ATP pilots, were unable to do so, but MIGHT have been able to recover had they been more aware, due to trim requests over time, that their airplane was becoming unflyable slowly, rather than just being hit with an unflyable aircraft when the A/P said "here - it's yours now".Second, if a pilot is so blissfully unaware of their situation while flying in an icing environment that A) they do not notice and B) don't do something immediately about it while C) disconnecting the entire autopilot as well as the autotrim, then I posit that this pilot is so clueless that they would be unable to safely extract themselves from that situation and land the airplane, in which case it's already a lost cause, and through no fault of the autotrim.
I'd at least like to give the pilots the chance of an earlier and simpler recovery.
You and me both...Thats my opinion only, worth what you paid for it. Don't mind me, I'm just all old and cranky and stuff.