Silence. Outside, the de-ice truck idled pointlessly. Dave pulled up the maintenance page on the tablet—a fan-made addition to the Zibo mod. There it was: a known edge case. “Cold-soaked center tank.” No official Boeing document mentioned it. Just a forum post by a real-world 737 freighter pilot who flew in Alaska.
The soft amber glow of the instrument panel was the only light in the 737’s cockpit. First Officer Lena Miles ran her finger down the laminated Zibo mod checklist, a third-party labor of love that had turned the stock sim into a precision machine. zibo 737 checklist
“Dave, fuel temp’s holding at +2°C,” she said. “That’s odd. We’ve been on ground power for an hour.” Silence
Twenty minutes later, the center tank read +3°C. They started engines, taxied, and lifted into the frozen dark. At 10,000 feet, Lena pulled up the Zibo’s custom failure monitor—another community addition. Zero faults. There it was: a known edge case
“The center’s nearly gelling,” she said. “If we take off, boost pumps could cavitate.”