Talk about letting your guard down! In the summer when on the 29 " Airstreaks I baby them, always landing on grass unless told not to, and in fact have been into Afton several times and always land in the area between the taxi way and runway. Just another fun part of flying Bushwheels. With the skis on, I am limited to a max tire size of 8:00's, these tires are cheap and wear like iron, so I have no qualms about getting on the binders while on pavement. So, as I was on short final I decided to see if I had finally got all the air out of my newer/larger Grove brakes. Due to the ski installation I am forced to position the caliper in such a way as to make it almost impossible to bleed all the air out, the solution to this is simple, but one I didn't think of before my last install. All you do is bleed the brakes, already plumbed, (pumping up from the bottom with a pump oiler) BEFORE you bolt up the caliper, just hold it there in a position that'll make it easy for that last little bubble of air to get out, THEN bolt it in place. I'll do this next time, but really this had nothing to do with my problem.
I made a decision to get on the brakes pretty hard, though I had a few thousand feet of runway left, just to play around more then anything on my small cheap tires, and of course to make the back taxi to the cafe shorter. So...I reared back and gave a mighty push (compared to normal very gentle applications) and promptly veered to the right. I let up, and glanced down to make sure my big insulated boots were not snagging on the wrong pedals, which has never happened before but that was the first thing that popped into my mind. Everything looked good so I applied both brakes again, favoring the left to correct for the earlier veer.
Shortly afterward I said a bad word, and to my credit reached over and killed the "mags" (none on a 912S but old habits die hard). The good thing about the lightweight composite Kiev prop is it very quickly coggs down and comes to a full stop, so when I hit the frozen snowbank at maybe 4 mph, only 1 blade impacted and cracked. The snow showed the prop was stopped, so of course no crank issues especially as the Rotax has a slipper clutch anyway. The hub, due to the blade flexibility, wasn't overly stressed, so 1 new blade (300 bucks) and I'll be back in business. Thanks to Mark Heiner at the FBO, who also helped get it back on the runway, the plane is currently hangared until the next break in the weather and then I'll fly it out on the wood club that came with the kit, landing back at my place still with only one brake, but now I KNOW I have only have one brake, and besides the runway is a solid layer of glare ice (so slippery even the cat is staying off it, and so slick it's even hard to photogragh) due to a weird freeze frost cycle so no braking action is available anyway! I almost forgot: as of now no explanation has been found for the total (nearly) lack of brake fluid on one side, they worked fine before takeoff. This wasn't due to air in the lines it was total lack of brake on one side only.



