AvGas: Now $1 A Gallon!

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No, your eyes are not playing tricks on you.

In an effort to determine if the current cost of avgas makes flying prohibitive, a month long experiment is currently underway at the Redbird Skyport (KHYI) in San Marcos, Texas. For all of October 2013 the airport will be selling avgas for $1 per gallon with hopes that flying activity increases during this generous discount period.

Now don’t get all excited thinking you can borrow your uncles KC-135 and load it up with cheap fuel to hedge your future flying addiction. Sorry. The rules are that the airport will ONLY fuel standard aircraft tanks in piston-powered GA aircraft; no bladders, ferry tanks, or milk jugs allowed! 200 gallons per airplane, per day. Anything above 200 gallons will be charged at normal market fuel prices.

Fueling operations will be available from 6AM to 10PM daily from October 1st through October 31st. Surveys will be distributed to pilots to help Redbird collect additional data during this experiment.

Because of the expected high demand for fuel at Redbird, you have the option to call ahead on the phone (512.878.6670) or pre-register online to skip to the front of the line.
Not too shabby, eh?

Let us know in the comments below if you had the chance to benefit from this wild fuel experiment. We’d love to hear about your experience!

Also – would you fly more if avgas was in fact cheaper than current market prices? Let us know in the comments below.

Stuck Mic? There’s A Message For That!

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Sometimes it’s hard to tell when your Push To Talk switch is stuck in the transmit position, also known as having a “stuck mic.”

You’ve heard about it, maybe even read about it before. There’s plenty of stories on the Internet about pilots with stuck mic’s transmitting their cockpit conversations in-the-blind while we all listen and cringe. They don’t always end up being sexually explicit, expletive riddled, conversations between two professional Boeing 737 pilots like that infamous incident out there (Google it, it’s embarrassing to link to). Nevertheless, they do happen. There was even a recent incident where the Air Traffic Controller had a stuck mic on his end!

So how do you know if it’s you?

As it turns out, many avionics packages DO alert the pilot when their Push To Talk switch is stuck in the transmit mode. One example of this is a feature of the Radio Management Unit produced by Honeywell. The system is not only built with a red “MICSTK” alert message that displays on the radio screen, but it also disables the transmission function with an automatic cutout of the affected Push To Talk button–affectively disabling itself and all the Push To Talk switches on the affected side of the cockpit. So at least with this particular Honeywell unit the transmission will cut out (cease) on it’s own.

Many of the new, digital, glass general aviation avionics packages out there also alert the pilot of a similar instance. While it may not alert you that the mic is stuck or automatically cut out the transmission, there’s almost always a very small “TX” inscription depicted on the radio unit screen as you transmit. A constant illumination of the TX inscription while you’re not intentionally talking or transmitting on your radio would be the best indication that your Push To Talk switch is stuck.

Check it out, there’s a good chance you didn’t even notice the TX inscription before–it’s certainly there on all Garmin radio products.

Just why is a stuck mic so problematic? Well, the obvious reason is that it prohibits Air Traffic Control from communicating with pilots and vice versa. You recall what happens when two people try to transmit on the same frequency at the same time? Usually a bunch of squealing and radio distortion where typically nobody can be understood clearly. You wouldn’t want to miss that important traffic or low altitude alert that could save your bacon. Mmmmm, bacon. Anyway…

Next time you’re out flying and you hear a stuck mic, check your radio unit screen and look for one of these inscriptions and then sigh in relief when it isn’t you.

Clear Skies & Calm Winds,

SMAC