My example for the issue with a single stick was a little lame...opening a
Ziploc of trailmix, although that's a common one.  One that's no so common,
but when it happens it REALLY matters, was when I broke my second
crankshaft.  I was doing a prop test on a loaned prop and I'd climbed out of
my airport to 7000' at 120 mph to time the climb and get a rate of climb
number, leveled out at 7000', and the normal (before the 5th bearing) slight
vibration worsened, rather than reducing upon leveling out at cruise
altitude.  I immediately realized what had happened, and switched the engine
off to minimize damage, knowing that I could  glide farther than I'd
climbed, and did a U-turn for my airport.  It took about 7 minutes to glide
back home, and I had enough altitude to circle the airport once and get the
approach just perfect.  Plus I knew if I needed to restart it, it would fire
right up because it was only a "little" broken, and idled fine before I shut
it off. 

Thanks to a slight wind that I hadn't noticed on takeoff (no AWOS at my
airport),  I started thinking I was a little short on very-short final, so I
opened the throttle a tad and hit the starter and although it turned over
freely, it wouldn't start, even with wind blowing through it.  Turns out it
had cooled down to the same 22F degrees ambient that existed when I fired it
up 15

 minutes earlier, and without an extra hand to run the primer, it wasn't
going to start again!  So I needed THREE hands (flaps require more stick
input than my thighs could provide).  I ended up landing 20 yards short of
the runway, taking out some bushes with one of my wheel pants.   [I now
ensure that the bushes never grow back...I only have to contend with cotton
or corn now.]

My point is that there are times when the use of BOTH hands is vital, and
sometimes you need three!  On N891JF I had the good sense to put the primer
button directly under the starter button, so one hand can do both jobs, but
that center stick is going away as soon as I get a chance, hopefully before
the flight to Chino.   Although I like to make my own components, I have one
of Steve Glover's awesomely well done dual stick setups  that I couldn't
possibly build for the same cost, given my hourly rate when working, and
it's going in the plane when I get a chance.

Mark Langford, Harvest, AL
ML at N56ML.com
www.N56ML.com 


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