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....in the USA instead of 400,000 or so:
There would be GA airports *everywhere*. They would be like beehives on the day before Thanksgiving. You could rent a T hangar for less than the cost of a 1 br apartment. The accident rate would be about the same but the fatal accident rate would be lower due to modern, more crashworthy designs. You'd give the engine in your airplane about as much thought as you do the one in your car. The idea of sending oil samples off for analysis at each change would seem absurd. Your new "family" airplane would be air conditioned. It would have a headup synthetic vision/HITS display, emergency autoland capability, real time data link weather and a CD/DVD player. You'd have a second, "fun" airplane. 40-year old airplanes would all be junkers or lovingly restored classics. Vacuum pumps would be deep in landfills. Air traffic control would automated for most functions. Regulation enforcement officers would be flying around, watching and listening, but federal enforcement actions would be more uniform and fair due to more lawyers and politicians getting busted and raising hell. Frogs could dance and the Cubs would win the World Series. -- Dan C172RG at BFM |
#2
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![]() "Dan Luke" c172rgATbellsouthDOTnet wrote in message ... | | Vacuum pumps would be deep in landfills. | You know, a lot of pilots *like* vacuum pumps. They don't want everything dependent on a single electrical system. The new Cessna Nav III package for 182s and 206s will be available in March. It will have the Garmin G1000 PFD and MFD displays. Vacuum instruments running off dual vacuum pumps will be located underneath the displays. A Cessna 182 with Nav III will cost the same as a Cessna 182 with Nav II does now. |
#3
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"C J Campbell" wrote:
You know, a lot of pilots *like* vacuum pumps. I'm not among them. They don't want everything dependent on a single electrical system. Then have two. The new Cessna Nav III package for 182s and 206s will be available in March. It will have the Garmin G1000 PFD and MFD displays. Vacuum instruments running off dual vacuum pumps will be located underneath the displays. What a great combination. I love Skylanes and and gadgets. -- Dan C172RG at BFM |
#4
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![]() "Dan Luke" c172rgATbellsouthDOTnet wrote in message ... | "C J Campbell" wrote: | You know, a lot of pilots *like* vacuum pumps. | | I'm not among them. | | They don't want everything | dependent on a single electrical system. | | Then have two. | | The new Cessna Nav III package for 182s and 206s will be available | in March. It will have the Garmin G1000 PFD and MFD displays. | Vacuum instruments running off dual vacuum pumps will be located | underneath the displays. | | What a great combination. I love Skylanes and and gadgets. And the Nav III package even gives you two electrical systems, just like you want. Two electrical systems, two vacuum systems, redundancy in everything except engines and airframes. |
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I have heard that Cessna sold out 2004 withing 24 hrs of the G1000
announcement. Mike MU-2 "C J Campbell" wrote in message ... "Dan Luke" c172rgATbellsouthDOTnet wrote in message ... | "C J Campbell" wrote: | You know, a lot of pilots *like* vacuum pumps. | | I'm not among them. | | They don't want everything | dependent on a single electrical system. | | Then have two. | | The new Cessna Nav III package for 182s and 206s will be available | in March. It will have the Garmin G1000 PFD and MFD displays. | Vacuum instruments running off dual vacuum pumps will be located | underneath the displays. | | What a great combination. I love Skylanes and and gadgets. And the Nav III package even gives you two electrical systems, just like you want. Two electrical systems, two vacuum systems, redundancy in everything except engines and airframes. |
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"Mike Rapoport" wrote:
I have heard that Cessna sold out 2004 withing 24 hrs of the G1000 announcement. Wow. |
#7
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![]() On 16-Oct-2003, "Dan Luke" c172rgATbellsouthDOTnet wrote: ...in the USA instead of 400,000 or so: There would be GA airports *everywhere*. They would be like beehives on the day before Thanksgiving. I think what you mean is that there would be few places without convenient access to/from a GA airport You could rent a T hangar for less than the cost of a 1 br apartment. More likely GA airplanes would be designed with features like folding wings to make storage more efficient The accident rate would be about the same but the fatal accident rate would be lower due to modern, more crashworthy designs. The real key to even getting to that level of GA use would be to make it practical for GA airplanes and pilots to safely operate IFR in pretty much the same mix of weather that the airlines fly in. The biggest challenges: practical and low cost ice protection and weather visualization (the latter rapidly becoming a reality) and greatly simplified IFR procedures (so that 25 million pilots could operate "in the system." You'd give the engine in your airplane about as much thought as you do the one in your car. The idea of sending oil samples off for analysis at each change would seem absurd. But aircraft engines would continue to cost a lot more than auto engines -- just not ten times as much. Your new "family" airplane would be air conditioned. Maybe. Still a big weight penalty and not needed nearly as universally as AC in cars It would have a headup synthetic vision/HITS display, emergency autoland capability, real time data link weather and a CD/DVD player. It would certainly have a lot of "high tech" avionics, but the demands of traffic control in an environment with 25 million pilots would dominate their functionality. You'd have a second, "fun" airplane. Maybe, but even with mass production techniques airplanes would still cost lots more than cars -- just not 10 times as much. 40-year old airplanes would all be junkers or lovingly restored classics. Probably right. Vacuum pumps would be deep in landfills. Everything that COULD be electronic WOULD be electronic. You would certainly have redundant electrical systems Air traffic control would automated for most functions. It would have to be to manage the 50-fold increase in traffic. Oh, and by the way, there would undoubtedly need to be enforced positive control in virtually all airspace with the possible exception of parts of Alaska Regulation enforcement officers would be flying around, watching and listening, but federal enforcement actions would be more uniform and fair due to more lawyers and politicians getting busted and raising hell. The reason for more uniform (and aggressive) enforcement of regulations would be that with 25 million users the system would collapse without it Frogs could dance and the Cubs would win the World Series. Naw, its not as unlikely as the Cubs winning the Series. ------- -Elliott Drucker |
#8
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"Dan Luke" c172rgATbellsouthDOTnet writes:
They don't want everything dependent on a single electrical system. Then have two. If you have smoke in the cockpit, you'll have to turn them both off. All the best, David |
#9
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"David Megginson" wrote:
They don't want everything dependent on a single electrical system. Then have two. If you have smoke in the cockpit, you'll have to turn them both off. Good point. I'd *still* rather have two electrical systems than one electrical and one vacuum. -- Dan C172RG at BFM |
#10
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On Thu, 16 Oct 2003 10:26:32 -0500, "Dan Luke"
c172rgATbellsouthDOTnet wrote: Frogs could dance and the Cubs would win the World Series. I will win the Texas Lotto before the Cubs ever win a World Series. |
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