Well, how much gas in my tanks makes a difference, and whether the unuseable was in there when I started to calibrate the dipstick matters - it matters because I will either have 3 gallons useable or zero gallons useable per side when I get to a given (albeit low) point. 3 gallons useable per side is 6, thats 45 minutes of flight time, which might just be what I "think" is my safety fuel, which might not actually be there

. Bottom line is that nobody else really worries about this, so I will figure it out myself. Even if I never get that low in the tanks, I would rather know that I have 1.5 hours of fuel instead of 2.0 left, in Alaska, where airports with gas can be a long ways apart, with a lot of unfriendly terrain inbetween, in matters. I also like monitorring my fuel burn, keep an eye on it to make sure it doesn't creep up, so I would like my calibration system as good as possible, off a couple of gallons really throws things off when you plan a 3 hour flight with multiple landings and no re-fuel.
It doesn't surprise me that some people posting here are quick to react, they spend most of their time in books, and less time out actually flying the plane over terrain and in situations that really push the 170, to most people in the lower 48 a 2000 foot strip is REALLY short, and having gas more than an hours flight away is also a long way. Up here, where a lot of people die every year from every possible type of mistake and bad luck, the better a pilot you are, the more questions you ask and more you know how your plane really performs, the more times you get to come home and park your airplane. For those people who react to questions like mine with a condescending view point, my guess is that books take precedent over actual, learned knowledge. I'll start with the manual, but when it comes right down to it, everyone of our planes is different, and if you believe everything in your manual, with a 50 year old plane that could have had any number of modifications without a logbook entry (happens all the time up here) then I think that YOU are unsafe. The best information I find on the website are the folks actually finding things out about their specific airplanes. I posted this question here because I thought other folks might be interrested in the question of how to safely calibrate a dip stick so that it actually works, even at the low end (even if we would be unlucky enough to be flying with only 3 gallons useable left, it is still good to know you got only 3 and not the 6 or 9 you thought you had). I think we'll end there, happy flying to you, I'm off to the Knik gravel bars to practice some more short field work with full tanks.
