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#11
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![]() "Robert M. Gary" wrote in message oups.com... Richard Collins wrote about this type of things 10 years ago. He looked at why us Mooney owners pay more in insurance than Arrow pilots and why Mooneys have more wx accidents. His opinion was that the Mooney was made to be a traveling machine, just like the Cirrus. When you have a fast traveling machine you go places. When you go places you encounter more weather. 172's don't encouter as many wx related accidents because if your mission is to cross the Sierras 10 times per year, you don't buy a 172. Perhaps the Cirrus appeals to less experienced pilots as well. I wonder if new(er) pilots see it as a fixed gear single and automatically equate it to a 172 or a 182 at most. The analogy is only remotely linked. Just wondering. -- Matt --------------------- Matthew W. Barrow Site-Fill Homes, LLC. Montrose, CO |
#12
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![]() Matt Barrow wrote: (( snip )) Think of it as analogous to the people that buy a 4WD / SUV then go racing down an icy road and end up in a ditch. -- Matt i like that analogy. i'm sorta suprised noone has gotten on the cirrus guys' comment that they have a really excellent icing system...the saying it's only good for an hour or so to find somewhere to land. huh?? do you suspect they might phrase that a little different in the sales talk?? i would be interested in knowing how many times that pilot had made that trip in those "approximate" conditions, relied on that "excellent" icing system and did just fine. baron driver i know suggested his excellent icing system was very valuable in that it gave you something to fiddle with while killing time waiting for the impact. dan |
#13
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I'm not convinced there is anything wrong with the aircraft per se.
Having flown one, I am absolutely convinced there is nothing wrong with it - assuming you have the right pilot in the seat. Actually, I rather like the aircraft. It's roomy and comfortable, the visibility is excellent, the panel (meaning the new glass panel) spectacular in both functionality and redundancy, and the side-yoke is a damn good idea. I find it slightly less demanding to fly in IMC than a V-tail Bonanza, but the difference comes entirely from improved ergonomics/instrumentation. The airframe itself, despite being fixed gear, is just as slippery and pitch-sensitive as a Bonanza with the gear up, and maybe more so. On top of that, you can't slow down by dropping the gear. I've often said that an Arrow is not really a complex airplane - it's just a Cherokee with a couple of extra levers. The same principle applies to the Cirrus - it's not really a simple airplane, it's a Bonanza with a couple of levers missing. Further, adding the parachute makes the decisionmaking AND the flying of the emergency procedure more complex AND more demanding than in a Bonanza - it's part of the way to being a light twin. Here we have an accident where the pilot didn't keep his airspeed under control - and so of course the parachute did him no good. Conceptually, that's no different than a twin accident where the pilot fails to control airspeed in the single engine configuration. their marketing is still touting the product as providing quantum improvements in safety, which it manifestly does not. Actually, I suspect it does provide some improvement. I suspect that if the same pilots with the same level of training were flying around in traditional heavy singles and light twins, the carnage would be worse. But the Cirrus business plan has always been to dramatically increase the number of pilots who fly for transportation, not simply take market share away from Beech or Mooney. I didn't think it was viable then, and I don't think it's viable now. Is Cirrus is selling a disproportionate number of airplanes to inexperienced pilots? That's certainly the impression I'm getting - the pilots either have low total time or low time in a similar class of airplane (and by similar class of airplane, I mean Bonanza, Viking, late model Mooney, etc.). I'm not seeing any accidents in the Cirrus being caused by pilots with hundreds of hours in a Bonanza or a Viking. It's not that a low time pilot CAN'T safely fly one. With the right instruction and the right attitude, it's very doable. However, the typical buyer of a Cirrus (near as I can tell) is a self-made man in late middle age. He is very likely to be a business owner (as this one was). Such people generally didn't get to where they are today by listening to all the people telling them what they couldn't do. Such people are also not going to hang around the airport absorbing knowledge. They're not going to meet the kind of instructor who can really teach them to get utility from that airplane without becoming statistics, and they're not going to rearrange their schedules and put up with his quirks to fly with him. And so we're goign to keep seeing accidents like this. Michael |
#14
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Michael 182 wrote:
"... is there any difference between how composites react to icing versus aluminum? Michael Michael, I am training in a Diamond DA-20 C1, incidentally, the only composite airplane on my flight schools ramp. I am flying in upstate SC. This morning, at 8:15 the top surfaces of the wings on the C1 were iced significantly, as was the nose and fuselage (tail boom). Outside air temp was 41*F/Overnight low was 40*F. Plane is tied-down, morning sun was directly on wing surfaces, no intervening shadows. My lesson was delayed, of course. Curious, I checked the other planes on the ramp-all of which are aluminum. NONE had icing on any surface. Through a very unscientific "hand touch" test I determined the composite surfaces "felt" much colder than the aluminum surfaces. I would be very interested in learning more about the heat/cold transfer dynamics of aluminum versus composites. Pure speculatin' though, I would bet from my limited experience that the composite will ice faster or retain ice longer than similarly exposed aluminum. But, there's always someone who knows more about it than me-so maybe they will chime in. Pete |
#15
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![]() Dan Luke wrote: To be fair, one must consider that this snazzy new design may be attracting a lot of new flyers. Is Cirrus is selling a disproportionate number of airplanes to inexperienced pilots? That doesn't appear to be the case. The latest AOPA Pilot "Safetypilot" article reported comparison studies of so-called "Technologically Advanced Aircraft." These are aircraft with at least a GPS navigator, a multifunction display, and an autopilot. Cirrus made 1,171 of these during the study period. Eight of them had crashed by press time. The other manufacturer made 1,003 of the other aircraft during that period. Eight of them had crashed by press time. The other aircraft? The Cessna 182. The only issue seems to be that every Cirrus crash gets an inordinate amount of attention in these groups. George Patterson He who would distinguish what is true from what is false must have an adequate understanding of truth and falsehood. |
#16
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![]() greenwavepilot wrote: Pure speculatin' though, I would bet from my limited experience that the composite will ice faster or retain ice longer than similarly exposed aluminum. I would bet that the composite will ice more slowly and retain the ice longer. It will lose or gain heat more slowly than aluminum. George Patterson He who would distinguish what is true from what is false must have an adequate understanding of truth and falsehood. |
#17
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George,
What is their definition of "crash"? Maybe a lot of the 182 "crashes" have been hard landings and such, versus a lot of these Cirrus crashes that seem to be more along the enroute phase and are fatal? Pete "George Patterson" wrote in message ... Dan Luke wrote: To be fair, one must consider that this snazzy new design may be attracting a lot of new flyers. Is Cirrus is selling a disproportionate number of airplanes to inexperienced pilots? That doesn't appear to be the case. The latest AOPA Pilot "Safetypilot" article reported comparison studies of so-called "Technologically Advanced Aircraft." These are aircraft with at least a GPS navigator, a multifunction display, and an autopilot. Cirrus made 1,171 of these during the study period. Eight of them had crashed by press time. The other manufacturer made 1,003 of the other aircraft during that period. Eight of them had crashed by press time. The other aircraft? The Cessna 182. The only issue seems to be that every Cirrus crash gets an inordinate amount of attention in these groups. George Patterson He who would distinguish what is true from what is false must have an adequate understanding of truth and falsehood. |
#18
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![]() "houstondan" wrote in message oups.com... i like that analogy. i'm sorta suprised noone has gotten on the cirrus guys' comment that they have a really excellent icing system...the saying it's only good for an hour or so to find somewhere to land. huh?? do you suspect they might phrase that a little different in the sales talk?? i would be interested in knowing how many times that pilot had made that trip in those "approximate" conditions, relied on that "excellent" icing system and did just fine. Night, mountains, ice, inexperienced pilot? Could be just simple task saturation followed by panic followed by disorientation with 'chute deployment too late to make a difference. It's awful soon to speculate the deicing system is bum. -cwk. |
#19
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George, I did some research and found the following thermal
conductivity values (Note these figures are for a standard temperature of 25*C): Aluminum, Pure=237 watts/meter*Kelvin Fiberglass, Paper Faced=.046 watts/meter*Kelvin So, what I should have inferred from my non-aviation experience with these materials is confirmed by the above thermal conductivity values. That is, aluminum is a good heat conductor-it can either gain or lose heat very quickly. Fiberglass on the other hand is a good insulator. It does not lose or gain heat very rapidly. Thus once "set" at a temperature, it will tend to remain there longer than aluminum. Therefore I would agree that versus fiberglass the aluminum surfaces will cool to icing temperatures faster, and conversely will heat to non-icing temperatures faster. The composite will cool more slowly, but once cooled, will retain that temperature much longer, meaning like I discovered this morning, my composite plane will/may be iced when the Cessnas, Pipers and Mooneys won't. During the preflight "Hand Checking Of All Surfaces" has added meaning for a composite driver. Pete |
#20
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greenwavepilot wrote:
The composite will cool more slowly, but once cooled, will retain that temperature much longer, If you fly high and descend fast on a reasonably humid day, you'll see condensation on the wings after the flight. Stefan |
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