![]() |
If this is your first visit, be sure to check out the FAQ by clicking the link above. You may have to register before you can post: click the register link above to proceed. To start viewing messages, select the forum that you want to visit from the selection below. |
|
|
Thread Tools | Display Modes |
#51
|
|||
|
|||
![]() "Jay Honeck" wrote in message news:OiQhc.2643$aQ6.415323@attbi_s51... Two data points that don't mean much: The only two guys I have personally known to have bought a Cirrus PRECISELY fit this description. Both guys have tons of money, not enough free time to stay current, and fly complicated, long-distance flights on the rare occasions they fly at all. What's the group-think on this one? Is Cirrus just good at attracting crappy pilots? Or is there something else at work here? The pilot in the Florida incident had 600 hours in type, an instrument rating, and was a co-founder of the Cirrus Pilots Association. That hardly sounds like someone who does not stay current or who flies only on rare occasions. |
#52
|
|||
|
|||
![]()
Edr,
I refuse to read Collins, sorry. He's just too biased in all he writes. -- Thomas Borchert (EDDH) |
#53
|
|||
|
|||
![]() "C J Campbell" wrote: What's the group-think on this one? Is Cirrus just good at attracting crappy pilots? Or is there something else at work here? The pilot in the Florida incident had 600 hours in type, an instrument rating, and was a co-founder of the Cirrus Pilots Association. That hardly sounds like someone who does not stay current or who flies only on rare occasions. Yet I still don't buy the idea that there is something "wrong" with the aircraft in a technical sense. Similar events have killed similarly notable pilots of Bonanzas. What's wrong is the whole mindset associated with owning a Cirrus, IMO. Remember NASA's AGATE program and the gushing Atlantic Monthly article? Cirrus Design got a big sales boost from being associated with the whole idea of a "revolution" in GA. Technology was going to produce a new world where light aircraft could be flown by non experts for regular, reliable transportation. Incredibly, it seems many people have accepted this preposterous notion and put their money down. Perhaps the experience of owning a Cirrus reinforces the feeling among some pilots that they have achieved the dream, and they are surprised, fatally, to find that nothing fundamental has changed. -- Dan C172RG at BFM |
#54
|
|||
|
|||
![]()
Perhaps the
experience of owning a Cirrus reinforces the feeling among some pilots that they have achieved the dream, and they are surprised, fatally, to find that nothing fundamental has changed. I think you've nailed it, Dan. All that "gee whiz!" stuff in the panel, along with the nice handling and extra speed, must make regular Spam Can pilots feel pretty much invulnerable. After all, they've got a 3-axis autopilot, traffic avoidance, moving map GPS, and -- if all else fails -- the 'chute to fall back on. I know *I* would feel much safer in such a capable aircraft -- but I'd also be tempted to push my personal flight envelope in compensation. I also believe that many pilots who can afford the expense of a new Cirrus are hard-driving, over-worked, successful folks, with little time for simple things like pattern work, and little tolerance for not getting there on time. All of this seems to add up to a lethal concoction. Too bad -- insurance rates on those planes were *finally* starting to come down a bit. -- Jay Honeck Iowa City, IA Pathfinder N56993 www.AlexisParkInn.com "Your Aviation Destination" |
#55
|
|||
|
|||
![]()
"Dan Luke" wrote in message
... Yet I still don't buy the idea that there is something "wrong" with the aircraft in a technical sense. Similar events have killed similarly notable pilots of Bonanzas. What's wrong is the whole mindset associated with owning a Cirrus, IMO. Remember NASA's AGATE program and the gushing Atlantic Monthly article? Cirrus Design got a big sales boost from being associated with the whole idea of a "revolution" in GA. Technology was going to produce a new world where light aircraft could be flown by non experts for regular, reliable transportation. Incredibly, it seems many people have accepted this preposterous notion and put their money down. Perhaps the experience of owning a Cirrus reinforces the feeling among some pilots that they have achieved the dream, and they are surprised, fatally, to find that nothing fundamental has changed. -- Dan C172RG at BFM But wouldn't fairly regular instrument failures and a reliability record rivaling a Yugo be considered a fault with the aircraft? How about the fact that it is difficult to trim? One person's workaround was to engage the autopilot, wait for it to trim itself, then release the auto pilot. In an emergency, something as simple as trimming for best glide would divert your attention for an unacceptably long time. The v-tail Bonanzas had lots of tail defects, and most (all?) have the fuel burn weight shift quirk. And I'm sure almost everybody will agree, even Beech, that stepping up from a 172 or Cherokee is a major step requiring extra training and respect. Cirrus salesmen, on the other hand, advertise their craft as safe and easy to fly. Tri-gear and no prop controls, so no complex needed. The displays walk you through everything. Everything the new pilot needs. Yet the common thread on the groups here, puts the Cirrus in the same class as the Bo (a true complex) as far as pilot skill required. |
#56
|
|||
|
|||
![]()
Jay,
All of this seems to add up to a lethal concoction. Uh, just ONE of the THREE recent accidents ended with fatalities? But we have to rationalize those 40 year old spam cans we own somehow... -- Thomas Borchert (EDDH) |
#57
|
|||
|
|||
![]() "fuji" wrote in message ... But wouldn't fairly regular instrument failures and a reliability record rivaling a Yugo be considered a fault with the aircraft? How about the fact that it is difficult to trim? snip Cirrus salesmen, on the other hand, advertise their craft as safe and easy to fly. I think it is a fault with the aircraft if it is beyond the capabilities of pilots flying it, which may well be the case. However, I have seen nothing that proves to me that the pilots are poorly trained or incapable. I, like many others, have a suspicion that this may be the case, but no proof. In fact, some of the pilots involved seem to me to be people who fly a lot. The Cirrus has poor stall/spin recovery capabilities. It is difficult to get the Cirrus to enter a stall, but not impossible, as some of these accidents have demonstrated. Given that the parachute will not deploy if the airplane is too close to the ground, the airplane itself is a slippery design that can easily get away from the pilot, the flaps are too small, and the airplane cannot recover from even an incipient spin, I would say that low level flight in the Cirrus must be far more dangerous than it is in most other aircraft. The Cirrus has a death zone in its normal operating envelope. This aircraft cannot be safely operated below 900' AGL. What would the Florida pilot, for example, have done if he had lost his instruments and/or become spatially disoriented (whichever happened) at 600' AGL instead of 1000' AGL? He would have died, that's what. Furthermore, the odd trim button, unfamiliarity with the instruments which also keep the pilots' eyes more focused in the cockpit than they probably should be, high speed and slippery design contribute to create more opportunities for CFIT accidents. Add to these the demonstrably poor quality control at the factory and the fact that few maintenance people have any experience whatsoever working on these airplanes. You are going to get a lot of maintenance problems. A pilot who is distracted by something going wrong -- perhaps it is only minor, but a distraction nonetheless, in the soup or at night, over mountainous terrain, or maybe coming in for a landing where the field is at IMC minimums, etc., and he may be somewhat behind the airplane anyway after a long and tiring flight (anyone disagree here that you easily get behind the airplane in a Cirrus?), and you start to get a serious chain of events that can lead to a fatal accident. He is too low to deploy the chute safely, trying to slow the airplane down to get back control, maybe climb steeply to avoid a sudden obstacle, and now you have four dead people. Cirrus is not that big of a company. In a litigation environment where Cessna can pay an award of $480 million for a bogus claim about the seat tracks failing, I think Cirrus stock would be a high risk investment, to say the least. Perhaps someone else will pick up the type certificate and continue manufacturing, but the history is not that good. You are an FAA guy, seeing these accidents. Comes now Cirrus with its petition to increase the airframe life limit of the SR22 beyond the ridiculous 4030 hours it now has. All your life you have been told to err on the conservative side. Meanwhile you have people in your own organization suggesting that you ground the entire fleet until Cirrus figures out what is going wrong. What is your decision likely to be? Personally, I enjoyed the one Cirrus flight I took. Realistically, though, I think the Klapmeiers may be the worst thing to happen to general aviation since Jim Bede. They took new and promising technology and made it disreputable, probably setting general aviation back more than 20 years. I think that is unforgivable. |
#58
|
|||
|
|||
![]()
"C J Campbell" wrote:
The Cirrus has poor stall/spin recovery capabilities. It is difficult to get the Cirrus to enter a stall, but not impossible, as some of these accidents have demonstrated. Given that the parachute will not deploy if the airplane is too close to the ground, the airplane itself is a slippery design that can easily get away from the pilot, the flaps are too small, and the airplane cannot recover from even an incipient spin, I would say that low level flight in the Cirrus must be far more dangerous than it is in most other aircraft. The Cirrus has a death zone in its normal operating envelope. This aircraft cannot be safely operated below 900' AGL. I am not sure that the last sentence makes sense. Even if all the other attributes are correct (I have never flown a Cirrus), what is unsafe about flying an approach at proper airspeeds. I doubt that I could recover from a low level stall/spin (base to final). That does not make it unsafe. I just don't get into that flight mode. Ron Lee |
#59
|
|||
|
|||
![]()
"fuji" wrote:
But wouldn't fairly regular instrument failures and a reliability record rivaling a Yugo be considered a fault with the aircraft? I've seen these charges thrown around a bit. Got a source of statistics to back them up? How about the fact that it is difficult to trim? ... In an emergency, something as simple as trimming for best glide would divert your attention for an unacceptably long time. This seems to be a fact and I agree it is a fault. I'm sure almost everybody will agree, even Beech, that stepping up from a 172 or Cherokee is a major step requiring extra training and respect. Cirrus salesmen, on the other hand, advertise their craft as safe and easy to fly. Tri-gear and no prop controls, so no complex needed. The displays walk you through everything. Everything the new pilot needs. Yet the common thread on the groups here, puts the Cirrus in the same class as the Bo (a true complex) as far as pilot skill required. My point exactly. -- Dan C172RG at BFM |
#60
|
|||
|
|||
![]()
On Sun, 25 Apr 2004 12:50:34 -0500, "Dan Luke"
wrote: "fuji" wrote: But wouldn't fairly regular instrument failures and a reliability record rivaling a Yugo be considered a fault with the aircraft? I've seen these charges thrown around a bit. Got a source of statistics to back them up? Join COPA and search the archive for the incidence of vacuum failures, HSI failures, and turn coordinator failures. One plane had 7 vacuum pumps fail, another had 5 HSI's. That suggest to me that the problem is with the plane (design or construction) rather than the instrument. (I had 7 autopilots fail before the fault was found in the Cirrus trim motor.) |
Thread Tools | |
Display Modes | |
|
|
![]() |
||||
Thread | Thread Starter | Forum | Replies | Last Post |
AOPA Stall/Spin Study -- Stowell's Review (8,000 words) | Rich Stowell | Aerobatics | 28 | January 2nd 09 02:26 PM |
Dover short pilots since vaccine order | Roman Bystrianyk | Naval Aviation | 0 | December 29th 04 12:47 AM |
Cirrus SR22 Purchase advice needed. | Dennis | Owning | 170 | May 19th 04 04:44 PM |
USAF = US Amphetamine Fools | RT | Military Aviation | 104 | September 25th 03 03:17 PM |
Israeli Air Force to lose Middle East Air Superiority Capability to the Saudis in the near future | Jack White | Military Aviation | 71 | September 21st 03 02:58 PM |