ried wrote:I was watching the live feed from Lake Hood seaplane base couple of months ago for about an hour where the camera was zoomed in on a docked 170/180 listing about 45*. I don't know how they saved it but today it was like nothing happened and was sitting proud by it's own little dock.
I would have gotten a couple of air mattresses or an inflatable boat to slide under the sunken pontoon but the google equivalent duckduckgo didn't turn up any standard procedure.
When flying into an isolated lake and your float suddenly springs a leak, what is onboard that saves your plane and gets you home? Just curious
If that’s the one I’m thinking of, it was caused by wind. Floats don’t typically spring a BIG leak spontaneously. That’s generally the result of hitting something in the water, like a rock, log, etc.
In that case you get the thing to shore ASAP, like with lots of power, and hope to beach it in shallow water. Maybe. Assuming that’s accomplished, the first task is how to plug the hole. That can be problematic, depending on shape and size of the hole.
But, these kinds of things are VERY rare in the real world.
The one at LHD would be easy enough to get a sling under the down end of the low float, lift it with a forklift/loader and pump it out. Most likely sunk due to wind driven waves running over tops of float, and water filling the float from the pumpouts.
Which is one reason I don’t like parking nose to beach. Heel em up and this is near impossible.
But in the bush.....it’s all about ingenuity.
I landed in a remote lake in an amphib Beaver, and could hear water rushing into float compartment after I shut the engine down. I got back in, fired up and laid the wood to it. Was able to take off before too much water flooded in. The plane was empty, which helped. Flew back to town and landed on wheels. The Bristol 4580 floats had a rubber bladder which the wheel pushed up against when retracted, to provide water tight integrity. That bladder broke. That compartment was the largest on those floats. Flooding it in deep water may not have been good.
In a lot of hours on floats, that’s the only big leak I’ve had.
MTV