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#11
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What's a "103?"
"Curator" N185KG "Denny" wrote in message oups.com... On Feb 16, 9:43 am, "Dan Luke" wrote: "chad" wrote: I own a turbo Cessna 310 and I'm wondering if other turbo twin owners do their biennial flight review in their aircraft. Is single engine work required for a flight review if done in a twin? I'm concered that doing the review in my aircraft may be hard on the engines, specifically the turbos. Would I be better off to just rent a single engine for the review? Pardon the question from an ASEL owner, but what good is a BFR for a ME pilot that doesn't include engine-out procedures? -- Dan C-172RG at BFM The BFR is non plane specific, non maneuver specific, etc... The CFI can call for engine out procedures but that is exactly what he does not want his turbo engines to go through... If he does it in his plane, then he and the CFI have to decide what specific maneuvers will be done... Even though I learned to fly in conventional gear and flew such planes most of my youth (J3, T-craft, 120, 103, etc.) I have also spent the past few decades pushing twins towards the horizon... This past BFR I chose to renew my aquaintance with conventional gear by checking out in a PA-12... The reason for this one is that it returns me to the right hand stick, left hand throttle, world.. First ten minutes were fun breaking my right hand from moving when my brain called for power changes... By the end of the sessionI had the full stall landing working again and the hands sorted out... More fun that a bag full of monkeys... Gonna do it for the next BFR also... |
#12
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You do have a fair point and concern. Can it wait for summer?
Here is what I do. Don't do rapid power changes. If I will be simulating an engine out, pull back slowly. and leave a little on to simulate feather. If I need more power to keep it warm, drop down some flaps. As far as your turbo worries go, I would think they will be okay. Unless you don't allow them to spool down before shutting down. But there are no guarantees about anything. It's always your call.] John chad wrote: I own a turbo Cessna 310 and I'm wondering if other turbo twin owners do their biennial flight review in their aircraft. Is single engine work required for a flight review if done in a twin? I'm concered that doing the review in my aircraft may be hard on the engines, specifically the turbos. Would I be better off to just rent a single engine for the review? |
#13
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![]() "Robert M. Gary" wrote in message ps.com... On Feb 16, 6:35 am, Nathan Young wrote: The flight portion of my BFRs have focused on basic maneuvers, stalls, slow flight, steep turns, and landings. These procedures pretty much dictate the engines will go through many high/low power cycles... Not the best for a turbo'd engine. If I was you, I would rent a single for the day. As a CFI I would not sign a guy off in a single for a BFR if I know his daily flying is a turbo twin. However, we could probably do the flight review in the twin without putting too much stress on his engines. Or, he could rent a twin. -Robert, CFII You're the CFI, so you can sign off whatever you want, but that doesn't make sense to me. If a guy who flies B-747's for a living can get his tailwheel endorsement and have that count as a BFR, I don't see why anyone would draw a line in the sand as you describe... I don't think that is what the FAA intended when they created the BFR... KB |
#14
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Does the CFI giving the review need to have a CFIMEL rating if the flight is in the twin?
"Denny" wrote in message oups.com... : On Feb 16, 9:43 am, "Dan Luke" wrote: : "chad" wrote: : I own a turbo Cessna 310 and I'm wondering if other turbo twin owners : do their biennial flight review in their aircraft. Is single engine : work required for a flight review if done in a twin? I'm concered : that doing the review in my aircraft may be hard on the engines, : specifically the turbos. Would I be better off to just rent a single : engine for the review? : : Pardon the question from an ASEL owner, but what good is a BFR for a ME pilot : that doesn't include engine-out procedures? : : -- : Dan : C-172RG at BFM : : The BFR is non plane specific, non maneuver specific, etc... The CFI : can call for engine out procedures but that is exactly what he does : not want his turbo engines to go through... If he does it in his : plane, then he and the CFI have to decide what specific maneuvers will : be done... : Even though I learned to fly in conventional gear and flew such planes : most of my youth (J3, T-craft, 120, 103, etc.) I have also spent the : past few decades pushing twins towards the horizon... This past BFR I : chose to renew my aquaintance with conventional gear by checking out : in a PA-12... The reason for this one is that it returns me to the : right hand stick, left hand throttle, world.. First ten minutes were : fun breaking my right hand from moving when my brain called for power : changes... By the end of the sessionI had the full stall landing : working again and the hands sorted out... More fun that a bag full of : monkeys... Gonna do it for the next BFR also... : |
#15
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![]() Kyle Boatright wrote: As a CFI I would not sign a guy off in a single for a BFR if I know his daily flying is a turbo twin. I have a friend with four super cubs, one on amphibs. A 182 with a canard on the nose, 310 hp and 26 bush wheels all around. A Spartan Executive. A Caravan and a 210 with a turbine in it. What should he do his BFR with? |
#16
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I know you didn't intentionally mis-attribute that, but....
KB "Newps" wrote in message . .. Kyle Boatright wrote: As a CFI I would not sign a guy off in a single for a BFR if I know his daily flying is a turbo twin. I have a friend with four super cubs, one on amphibs. A 182 with a canard on the nose, 310 hp and 26 bush wheels all around. A Spartan Executive. A Caravan and a 210 with a turbine in it. What should he do his BFR with? |
#17
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On Feb 16, 3:06 pm, "Kyle Boatright" wrote:
"Robert M. Gary" wrote in glegroups.com... On Feb 16, 6:35 am, Nathan Young wrote: The flight portion of my BFRs have focused on basic maneuvers, stalls, slow flight, steep turns, and landings. These procedures pretty much dictate the engines will go through many high/low power cycles... Not the best for a turbo'd engine. If I was you, I would rent a single for the day. As a CFI I would not sign a guy off in a single for a BFR if I know his daily flying is a turbo twin. However, we could probably do the flight review in the twin without putting too much stress on his engines. Or, he could rent a twin. -Robert, CFII You're the CFI, so you can sign off whatever you want, but that doesn't make sense to me. If a guy who flies B-747's for a living can get his tailwheel endorsement and have that count as a BFR, I don't see why anyone would draw a line in the sand as you describe... I don't think that is what the FAA intended when they created the BFR... A guess who flys 747's for a living doesn't require a BFR endorsement but a biannual CFI ride in the tailwheel isn't a bad idea if he flys tailwheels. -Robert |
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On Feb 16, 4:58 pm, Newps wrote:
Kyle Boatright wrote: As a CFI I would not sign a guy off in a single for a BFR if I know his daily flying is a turbo twin. I have a friend with four super cubs, one on amphibs. A 182 with a canard on the nose, 310 hp and 26 bush wheels all around. A Spartan Executive. A Caravan and a 210 with a turbine in it. What should he do his BFR with? For the FAA or for safety? A review in each plane would not be a bad idea or at least take the 310 and the Spartan. This issue came up in some discussions from the FAA. The question was, should you do a BFR in a C-152 for a guy who only flies his Citation. Legally, you can. Personally, I would not. The BFR should be made to suit the type of flying the pilot does. I can't do Citation work in a C-150. -Robert |
#19
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On Feb 16, 12:12 pm, "karl gruber" wrote:
What's a "103?" "Curator" N185KG Stinson Stationwagon |
#20
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Interesting, the way these threads go... I see some folks rightously
claiming the FAA didn't INTEND for this or that... The 'intent' of the FAA is absolutely meaningless, and any trial court in the country will tell you that... It is what the reg says that is legally binding - not the intent of the FAA legal staff who signed off on the reg, many of whom will not even be still employed there... The intent of the Bienniel Flight Review (as revealed by the language) is that each of us shall get one hour of flight instruction from a CFI - period.... Presumably the FAA feels that will help with public safety, or maybe not, but that gets us back into the quicksand of intent. In any case, you do the 1 hour of flight review and if the CFI feels that you have met the criteria HE has set (no slight implied Michelle), you get signed off as meeting the regulation... In my case I chose to improve my airplane handling by renewing my acquaintance with cross wind landings in conventional gear aircraft with right hand stick and left hand throttle.. In your case it might be best spent reviewing PAR approaches to minimums - In another case it might be best spent reviewing the proper way to enter the traffic pattern (based on what I see some pilots do) For others some intensive instruction on how NOT to use the radio would be very useful! For others a reintroduction to cross country navigation using only a whisky compass and a chart would pay benefits... When is the last time you plotted a cross country course including compass deviation and variation and wind correction angle (remember those terms? can you define them?) and then flew it... In any case, if the CFI tells me he wants to see single engine cuts at 50 feet, he will remain unemployed by me... cheers ... denny |
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