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#11
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#12
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Chixfly2 wrote:
One of my airplanes is a PA28-140 160hp. I finally took the back seats out to prevent people from saying, "you don't mind flying me, my wife and kids up to Tahoe for the weekend?". Sure you can do that. Make sure to leave San Jose (or whereever) at 5am. Take him up on Tuesday, the wife up on Wednesday, and the kids up on Thursday and Friday. P.S.: I need to get back up to Tahoe - it's gorgeous in the summer! An hour to get there, rent a car, and drive to the 'beach'... Hilton |
#13
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Nathan Young wrote in message . ..
Glad to hear you made it safely. Probably the best lesson learned is that the real world performance of a 30 year old plane rarely matches the numbers in the POH, and that when operating near the edge of the envelope - there is little margin for error (or Mother Nature). I'm Curious about something. Everyone says that a 30-year-old airplane will not perform like when it was a new airplane. However I never heard anyone explain WHY this is so. Assuming that a airplane (either a new factory aircraft or 30 year old trainer) has had it's annual done and engine is up to par (compression ect..) than why would these values change? An engine close to TBO will still deliver fuel and power values very close to the POH. The only source of diminished performance I can think of would be from the rigging and/or airframe that could be a little out of alignment, however any large deviations would have to be fixed. If the performance value of a 30-year-old airplane does not match the values in the POH for that make/model of aircraft (i.e., performance values change over time), then I suggest that the FAA needs to address this issue. |
#14
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You are right, it should match the performance. There are a couple of
reasons why it doesn't. The flight test data is taken on a perfectly rigged airplane. In addition to a new engine, the airplane had a new prop. Airplanes tend to get heavier over time. I have seen three airplanes weighed and every one was 30 to 100lbs heavier than the W&B indicated. People and their stuff is probably heavier than they admit. Most of the performance data is calculated from a limited number of test points. The airplane wasn't really flown at every point on the performance chart. Mike MU-2 "Mark" wrote in message om... Nathan Young wrote in message . .. Glad to hear you made it safely. Probably the best lesson learned is that the real world performance of a 30 year old plane rarely matches the numbers in the POH, and that when operating near the edge of the envelope - there is little margin for error (or Mother Nature). I'm Curious about something. Everyone says that a 30-year-old airplane will not perform like when it was a new airplane. However I never heard anyone explain WHY this is so. Assuming that a airplane (either a new factory aircraft or 30 year old trainer) has had it's annual done and engine is up to par (compression ect..) than why would these values change? An engine close to TBO will still deliver fuel and power values very close to the POH. The only source of diminished performance I can think of would be from the rigging and/or airframe that could be a little out of alignment, however any large deviations would have to be fixed. If the performance value of a 30-year-old airplane does not match the values in the POH for that make/model of aircraft (i.e., performance values change over time), then I suggest that the FAA needs to address this issue. |
#15
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![]() Mark wrote: I'm Curious about something. Everyone says that a 30-year-old airplane will not perform like when it was a new airplane. Not everyone says this. My 25-year-old Cessna 150 met the book performance figures. At the time, it had a decent paint job, about 600 hours SMOH, and the prop had been recently overhauled. My take is that if the plane is in good condition, it will perform as well as it did when new. George Patterson None of us is as dumb as all of us. |
#16
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I've heard this, too, to not take the book performance seriously, and
I don't think I agree with it -- at least not for the reasons given: old airplane. The reason to not take the book performance seriously in my mind is: - professional test pilot - nickless prop - ISA day - test aircraft did not have all the accumulated detritus in the back that probably should be in the weight and balance since you never, ever take it out of the airplane. That said, my experience with the PA28-180 this past weekend was that the plane did in fact fly as the book predicted. If I had a pucker moment on my flight it was because I had the poor judgment to make a flight that required the plane to perform as specified by the poh *AND* I left no room for external factors, such as gusts and downdrafts upwind of the runway. Also, though I understand the poster who said that a Cherokee-180 simply is not a 4-place aircraft, I don't quite agree with it. The aircraft is what it is. It has a useful load of nearly a thousand lbs. Those pounds could be a lot of fuel, and one or two big people, or a little fuel and three big people, or four little people, or whatever combination you like. But to categorically write off capabilities of the machine because it's easier to plan/accept/think about/trust, unfairly diminishes the utility of the airplane. If I had waited to fly back from Bishop in the early morning when there was no weather and the air was cool, I am positive that I could say honestly that the flight would have been perfectly safe, with all four people, and our gear, and our fuel, all in an old rental Cherokee-180. Of course, my club just got a 182 on the line that I want to get checked out in. Faster, more carrying capacity, better climb performance, better views -- it'd be a much better mount for future trips. -- dave j -- jacobowitz73 -at- yahoo -dot- com "G.R. Patterson III" wrote in message ... Mark wrote: I'm Curious about something. Everyone says that a 30-year-old airplane will not perform like when it was a new airplane. Not everyone says this. My 25-year-old Cessna 150 met the book performance figures. |
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