r/nextfuckinglevel 26d ago

Engine fails during student pilot’s flight

1.9k Upvotes

119 comments sorted by

View all comments

280

u/tikojonas 26d ago

Insane that this actually happened. During my lessons they would power down the engines on purpose to show it will not fall to the ground but it will float wherever you’re able to go. He executed it perfect when he needed to.

29

u/brunaBla 26d ago

How does this happen? Is this true for smaller planes only?

2

u/fimaclo 26d ago

Every model of plane has specific documentation on characteristics of the airframe. A pilot should be very familiar with this documentation for any model of plane that they fly. This includes things like maximum straight-and-level speed, maximum maneuvering speed, and *ideal glide slope*. For a single-engine Cessna Skyhawk (similar to the plane in this video), it's around 8:1. If you're doing some local practice flying in a small plane, flying around at an altitude of around 5000 feet is fairly typical. This means that the engine going out gives you about 8 miles of range (and about 4 minutes, assuming a speed of 120 mph) to figure out a landing spot. Challenging and stressful, but usually doable!

All of this is why some of the most dangerous conditions for planes are takeoff (you don't yet have much altitude to use for gliding, so an engine failure is hard to recover from), landing (same reason), and mountainous areas (very few flat areas for landing).