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Advice and experts with 400 series Cessnas (414 and 421), purchase and training



 
 
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  #1  
Old December 31st 04, 12:52 AM
kontiki
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If you can afford it, and are willing to put in the time and effort
to do all of the things you elaborated on then why the hell not?

My only problem with your post is that it seems your reasoning
for wanting a twin is to help you avoid any possibility of getting
into any sort of weather. That seems sort of counter productive
in that either the 210 or the twins are very adept at dealing
with weather given a competent pilot and a some wise flight planning.


  #2  
Old December 31st 04, 01:43 AM
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On Fri, 31 Dec 2004 00:52:21 GMT, kontiki
wrote:

If you can afford it, and are willing to put in the time and effort
to do all of the things you elaborated on then why the hell not?

My only problem with your post is that it seems your reasoning
for wanting a twin is to help you avoid any possibility of getting
into any sort of weather. That seems sort of counter productive
in that either the 210 or the twins are very adept at dealing
with weather given a competent pilot and a some wise flight planning.


Maybe I didn't word that correctly. One rationale for wanting a twin
over a single is that I'd like to be able to fly *over* areas that are
below IFR minimums and over mountains without the worry that if I lose
my one engine, that I'd have to make an emergency landing with poor
odds of survival. There are other reasons for wanting a twin, but
assuming I keep up with emergency engine out procedure reviews, I'd
like the piece of mind knowing I can continue into more favorable
conditions with the remaining engine.

Some examples:

1. California's Central Valley can get persistant fog that lasts for
days, has ceilings of 100ft AGL or less, and quarter to half mile
visibility. I occasionally overfly those conditions from the bay area
to the Sierra mountains or southern Cal, and I'm concerned that losing
an engine over that kind of muck is pretty much a death sentence.

2. I like to fly to Tahoe, Truckee and Reno. I'd like the piece of
mind that an engine loss won't leave me over terrain that is
impossible to land on safely.
  #3  
Old December 31st 04, 03:09 AM
BTIZ
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engine loss on most twins.. in the Reno/Tahoe area will NOT keep you out of
trouble..

The single engine service altitude on some twins is well below that mountain
pass.

BT

wrote in message
news:1104457427.9d9ebb6bf233270beb75b79a476ce16b@t eranews...
On Fri, 31 Dec 2004 00:52:21 GMT, kontiki
wrote:

snip
2. I like to fly to Tahoe, Truckee and Reno. I'd like the piece of
mind that an engine loss won't leave me over terrain that is
impossible to land on safely.

snip


  #4  
Old December 31st 04, 03:31 AM
Matt Whiting
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BTIZ wrote:

engine loss on most twins.. in the Reno/Tahoe area will NOT keep you out of
trouble..

The single engine service altitude on some twins is well below that mountain
pass.


True, but a twin that loses an engine above the single engine service
doesn't plummet instantly to that altitude. Depending on how long the
pass is, a twin that is flying well above the SESC could transit the
pass long before the slow descent has dropped it to the SESC.


Matt

  #5  
Old December 31st 04, 05:53 AM
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On Thu, 30 Dec 2004 22:31:09 -0500, Matt Whiting
wrote:

BTIZ wrote:

engine loss on most twins.. in the Reno/Tahoe area will NOT keep you out of
trouble..

The single engine service altitude on some twins is well below that mountain
pass.


True, but a twin that loses an engine above the single engine service
doesn't plummet instantly to that altitude. Depending on how long the
pass is, a twin that is flying well above the SESC could transit the
pass long before the slow descent has dropped it to the SESC.


You don't need to be able to cruise all the way out of the mountains.
You just need to stay aloft long enough not to crash into a mountain
or canyon.
  #6  
Old December 31st 04, 06:51 AM
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On Thu, 30 Dec 2004 19:09:04 -0800, "BTIZ"
wrote:

engine loss on most twins.. in the Reno/Tahoe area will NOT keep you out of
trouble..


On departure, maybe not. I'm thinking more at cruise or if you've
already got some altitude. Engine failures on departure are dangerous
no matter what you are flying. There is no way to eliminate all risk,
I just hope to minimize risk as much as possible.


The single engine service altitude on some twins is well below that mountain
pass.


This is something I will have to investigate with any aircraft I will
consider buying.
  #7  
Old January 8th 05, 12:38 AM
Paul Smedshammer
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wrote in
news:1104457427.9d9ebb6bf233270beb75b79a476ce16b@t eranews:

On Fri, 31 Dec 2004 00:52:21 GMT, kontiki
wrote:

If you can afford it, and are willing to put in the time and effort
to do all of the things you elaborated on then why the hell not?

My only problem with your post is that it seems your reasoning
for wanting a twin is to help you avoid any possibility of getting
into any sort of weather. That seems sort of counter productive
in that either the 210 or the twins are very adept at dealing
with weather given a competent pilot and a some wise flight planning.


Maybe I didn't word that correctly. One rationale for wanting a twin
over a single is that I'd like to be able to fly *over* areas that are
below IFR minimums and over mountains without the worry that if I lose
my one engine, that I'd have to make an emergency landing with poor
odds of survival. There are other reasons for wanting a twin, but
assuming I keep up with emergency engine out procedure reviews, I'd
like the piece of mind knowing I can continue into more favorable
conditions with the remaining engine.

Some examples:

1. California's Central Valley can get persistant fog that lasts for
days, has ceilings of 100ft AGL or less, and quarter to half mile
visibility. I occasionally overfly those conditions from the bay area
to the Sierra mountains or southern Cal, and I'm concerned that losing
an engine over that kind of muck is pretty much a death sentence.

2. I like to fly to Tahoe, Truckee and Reno. I'd like the piece of
mind that an engine loss won't leave me over terrain that is
impossible to land on safely.


As somebody who does exactly this with a Mooney often (crossing over the
California Central Valley) I can attest to the desire to have another
engine. Just last month I was flying over a fog layer that was 100 agl
to tops at 1000 solid in the Central California Valley heading back to
the Northern Bay Area. I was at 4,500 feet when the engine began running
very rough. It cleared about 8 minutes later (turned out to be water in
the fuel or a plugged injector) but the feeling that I was a gonner is
still with me. Thinking about crossing over an overcast layer with no
place to safely glide makes a pit in my stomach. Having another engine
in that case that would allow me to find a clear spot on either side of
the Central Valley fog could have been a life saver. I was very lucky
and will think twice before going VFR over the top again on a single
engine.

Paul Smedshammer
Mooney M20F

  #8  
Old January 8th 05, 01:44 AM
john szpara
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On Sat, 08 Jan 2005 00:38:58 GMT, Paul Smedshammer
wrote:

ne
in that case that would allow me to find a clear spot on either side of
the Central Valley fog could have been a life saver. I was very lucky
and will think twice before going VFR over the top again on a single
engine.

Paul Smedshammer
Mooney M20F


I've pretty much been talked out of buying a twin. The way they talk
about it, it sounds like you'd have to be nuts to buy a twin,
especially an older one.

I guess I have 3 choices:

1. Buy a twin, go broke
2. Fly a singe, eventually get killed
3. Don't fly

John Szpara
Affordable Satellite
Fiero Owner 2-84 Indy Pace cars, 86 Coupe, 88 Formula 3.4, 88 Coupe, 88GT
  #9  
Old January 8th 05, 04:06 AM
Mike Rapoport
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The T210 is probably the best overall compromise between capability and cost
but it isn't really up to flying IMC over the Sierra, but the 340 and 421
would be marginal for that too.

Mike
MU-2


"john szpara" wrote in message
news:1105148624.5add2b1a2ce8325fe6c0b0c877086475@t eranews...
On Sat, 08 Jan 2005 00:38:58 GMT, Paul Smedshammer
wrote:

ne
in that case that would allow me to find a clear spot on either side of
the Central Valley fog could have been a life saver. I was very lucky
and will think twice before going VFR over the top again on a single
engine.

Paul Smedshammer
Mooney M20F


I've pretty much been talked out of buying a twin. The way they talk
about it, it sounds like you'd have to be nuts to buy a twin,
especially an older one.

I guess I have 3 choices:

1. Buy a twin, go broke
2. Fly a singe, eventually get killed
3. Don't fly

John Szpara
Affordable Satellite
Fiero Owner 2-84 Indy Pace cars, 86 Coupe, 88 Formula 3.4, 88 Coupe, 88GT



 




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