Are you a wheeled plane pilots who says, “One of these days, I'll get rated on floats?” Or perhaps you are a traveler who watches seaplanes take off and land? Either way, below is a primer about some differences between planes on floats vs wheels. (Our Piper has skis, floats, and wheels).
The most distinctive aspect of a seaplane (or float plane) is obviously the undercarriage. The floats (or pontoons) look like huge, bloated, Ronald McDonald shoes compared to puffy tundra tires and dainty tarmac tires. On our little Piper PA-20, the float assembly weighs 150 pounds more than wheels – the weight of an adult, cutting down on payload and fuel efficiency, and introducing additional drag. Other, less obvious differences are that floats are mounted directly to the fuselage with no suspension system, and that float planes have no brakes. They can rely on the friction of the water to slow down and stop.
Pre-flight:
Pre-flight checks of the floats underscore the fact that they are designed to function like boats, so many of the terms and design features are similar. In fact, we secure our float plane to an angled dock with a boat winch. In this position, most of each float is elevated above the water line, so we can inspect the keel (the bottom of the float) before sliding the plane down into the water and maneuvering it with a tow rope over to the adjacent boat dock, where we conduct the other pre-flight checks. Internally, the floats' bulkheads are divided into six watertight compartments, which must be “sumped out” with a portable bilge pump to remove any accumulated water (rain from above or seepage from below). Another chore is to check the retractable water rudder at the stern of each float. Some float planes also have a fin added under their tails for extra stability.
The ducks coming out to say "good morning" to their floating friend |
Idling:
Unlike a wheeled plane that can be stationary when idling, a float plane is alwaysmoving once unmoored (because it has no brakes). There is no leisurely period to "warm up the engine with a foot on the brake while briefing passengers." So as soon as the plane is unmoored, the pilot has to be acutely aware of wind, waves, currents, debris, overhanging trees, distance to shore, and vehicles or people in the surrounding water. (Many an air taxi pilot has told chatty passengers to "shut up.")
If my husband is flying alone, I push the plane away from the lake shore, toward the center of the lake so he can turn into the wind, usually S or SW. However, if I am accompanying him, departure is a bit trickier on the move, particularly since the Piper has only one front access door, on the starboard side. Virtually all summer at our lake, when the plane is pointed south into the wind, that door is on the side away from the dock. So as soon as I push the plane out into the water, I have to tiptoe (usually in waders) as fast as possible across a tight wire strung between the fronts of the floats, around the propeller, step onto the far float, swing under the strut and then up into the passenger seat before Bryan can start the ignition. (Usually while he is yelling at me to move faster!)
Taxiing:
Taxiing |
Take off:
To rise out of the water, the plane's attitude is nearly level, on the step part of the keel (so less drag), and the water rudders are up. With increasing speed, the weight of the plane becomes supported first by hydrodynamic lift (like water skiing) and then by aerodynamic lift. This stage of momentum is usually referred to as “being on the step.” During this time, an incorrect planing attitude can set off a series of oscillations evocatively called “porpoising.” Dangerously escalating amplitude can cause premature lift-off and a stall or a scary forward flip.
Taking off into the wind |
The drag effect of the water means that a float plane's take off distance is MUCH longer than its landing distance. Many a new pilot has safely landed on a little lake that he cannot then leave! Glassy (flat) water is the worst, as it seems to suck at the floats. To reduce drag, some pilots roll the plane slightly, to lift one float off the water before the other. For wheeled pilots trained to maintain a level attitude on take-off, this can be a disconcerting maneuver to learn – just enough to raise a float but not enough for the opposite wing tip to touch water.
Once airborne, the weight and size of the floats reduce acceleration, speed, and fuel efficiency, compared to a wheeled plane of the same make. Despite these constraints, float planes departing from lakes have a big advantage over wheeled planes on a runway. The pilot can virtually always turn into the wind – whatever its direction. So float plane pilots can usually avoid cross wind take offs that bedevil wheeled plane pilots more often.
Flying:
Listening for other traffic in the area |
Landing:
For emergency landings, float planes have a higher rate of descent and a diminished power-off glide range than a comparable wheeled plane. On the other hand, they have more options. Although obviously designed for water, they can land on grass, dirt, snow, or even a smooth runway, in a dire situation, sometimes without damage to the float keels (or plane).
For intentional landings, prudent pilots fly low over the water first. One reason is to search for debris in remote lakes and to look for fishermen, watercraft, and swimmers in occupied ones. It is highly likely that motor boats and water skiers will nothear a plane overhead, so a low approach alerts them to your imminent landing. A second reason is to scrutinize wave and current action, which can differ from the prevailing wind and thus present some tricky landing variables. The orientation of water fowl offers an important clue. Glassy, reflective water is dangerous as it is very difficult for a pilot to gauge altitude (and flat water presages a hard landing). Water level reference points like a dock, buoy, or water lilies can be very helpful during descent.
Landing and stopping quickly |
For touch down, the goal is to reduce speed as low as possible and “land on the step” - the same position as for take -off - in order to present the least amount of float surface to the water at the lowest speed. This reduces the drag effect, so energy can dissipate gently. With too much float surface at too much speed, the pilot and passengers are in for a quite a jolt, since the plane lacks a suspension system. Once the floats settle into the water (into plowing position), the pilot raises the nose to elevate the propeller above water spray and taxis in.
Docking/Tie-downs:
Docked behind the Fireweed and other wild flowers |
When we fly home, Bryan aims for the angled dock he built and revs the engine to drive us up onto the plastic slip strips. We tie the mooring lines to cleats and winch a wire line to the plane's spreader bar. If anyone else lived here, we'd call out, “Honey, we're home!”
SIDEBAR:
Want to learn more about float plane flying? Certification on floats requires 10 hours of instructor accompanied plane practice.