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This discussion is right down my alley.
I flew a T206 seaplane commercially and owned my own straight 206 seaplane. The T206 I flew for Rivers Inlet Resort on the British Columbia coast. http://www.riversinletresort.com/ We flew out of the Will Rogers-Wiley Post Seaplane Base. http://www.ci.renton.wa.us/pressrel/seaplane.htm This T206 seaplane was brand new in 1978 and normally was loaded with four fat fishermen, and their gear. We'd leave with about half fuel to be at gross and go through customs and fuel at Victoria B.C. I gained a lot of respect for the T206 seaplane. It was a great airplane. One thing not normally discussed is how nice the flying qualities of these airplanes are. They have "frise" ailerons. http://naca.larc.nasa.gov/reports/1946/naca-tn-1085/ The 206 has a great feel, much better than a Cessna 180 or 185. It also has a huge horizontal stabilizer and powerful elevators. We often left Rivers Inlet with a full load in high winds and rough seas. The wind was often 20-25 knots and seas of 2-3 feet. The bad part of takeoff was the smashing waves. The good part was the wind was strong and takeoff run was short. The first big wave to hit the T206 on takeoff would splash into the prop and almost bury the airplane in water. By the next wave the seaplane would be on the step and the wave would still catch the prop and water would stream over the windshield and on back, the floats and airplane taking a severe beating. It took full forward elevator at times to keep the airplane from bouncing into the air. The flaps were set at 20 deg. The next thing to happen was to wait till the stall warning horn came on. At that time full flaps were extended and the airplane would bounce off the next wave and stagger into the air. Then the nose was lowered and the airplane accelerated in ground effect and the flaps retracted. Those 206's are really built, and can take a beating! The T206 has 310 horsepower. The 206 has 300. It makes a BIG difference, especially in hot temperatures. The straight 206 seaplane is a DOG compared to the T206. My straight 206 seaplane even had a Robertson kit, which makes virtually no improvement in performance, especially on floats. Power is what gets a seaplane up on step. And power is what counts to accelerate the airplane. I could go on but I'm going to fly to BFI, beg a crew car and Christmas shop at Nordstrom. Karl "Curator" N185KG please don't grammar check this post!!! |
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("karl gruber" wrote)
Great info snipped please don't grammar check this post!!! Drat! :-) The Baron had Snoopy dead in his sights He reached for the trigger to pull it up tight Why he didn't shoot, well, we'll never know Or was it the bells from the village below. Christmas bells those Christmas bells Ringing through the land Bringing peace to all the world And good will to man http://www.xmasfun.com/Lyrics.asp?ID=90 -- Montblack http://lumma.de/mt/archives/bart.gif |
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