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#11
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"Jay Honeck" wrote in message news:OiQhc.2643$aQ6.415323@attbi_s51...
What's the group-think on this one? Is Cirrus just good at attracting crappy pilots? Or is there something else at work here? I have met 2 Cirrus pilots in recent months and both fit the profile you described. Relatively low time pilots with a lot of spare cash. To me, this looks a lot like what happened when Piper introduced the Malibu. It could be flown by low timers with just a HP and Complex endorsement. There was a rash of accidents involving overstressing of the airframe after the airplane got away from the pilot in turbulence or IMC. Unlike our lowly spam cans, the Malibu had a large gap between normal cruising speed and manuevering speed. If the plane got away from the pilot in cruise, it could not be horsed back into line like a Cherokee or 172. I think this problem was eventually solved by the insurance companies requiring a level of training that was more appropriate to the airplane type. My bet is that something similar will happen with the Cirrus. John Galban=====N4BQ (PA28-180) |
#12
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![]() "Jay Honeck" wrote in message news:OiQhc.2643$aQ6.415323@attbi_s51... There's been some discussion here about Cirrus' less-than-stellar safety record. Someone mentioned that perhaps the Cirrus line, with all of its whiz-bang electronics and slippery airframe, is attracting the "wrong" kind of pilots -- meaning, perhaps, too much cash and not enough sense? I've always heard this same thing said about the Bonanza (the "Fork-tailed doctor killer") -- but recent accident stats for the Bo don't appear to bear this out. Look at the difference in accident statistic differences between the V35 and the F33: BIG difference. 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? I'd equate the Cirrus and the V35: good designs but not for the occasional/inexperience/arrogant pilot. |
#13
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![]() "Roger Long" om wrote in message ... I am not at liberty to answer you because I know some Cirrus pilots myself. -- Uh huh, "But some of my best friends are Cirrus pilots!" :~) |
#14
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Bull****! I have flown the SR22 and I thought it handled quite
nicely. I question the piloting skills of anyone who would say something as inane about it as the bald tire bit listed below. It wasn't any harder to fly than a Piper Archer II. Dean "Michael 182" wrote in message news:3RQhc.2723$_L6.433903@attbi_s53... I haven't flown a Cirrus, ;( , so I can't speak to the flying characteristics. But the flight characteristics offered by "Toly": "but in the air the plane is very slippery and feels like it's skating on ice, only in three dimensions" sounds like a recipe for disaster, especially for a pilot that is rusty. One of the things I really like about my TR182 is that it like flying a rock. Yes, it is boring, and I have thought lately about trading it in for a fun airplane like a Maule or Citabria - but, in it's defense, when I haven't flown for a while it is incredibly forgiving of imperfect piloting. Michael "Jay Honeck" wrote in message news:OiQhc.2643$aQ6.415323@attbi_s51... There's been some discussion here about Cirrus' less-than-stellar safety record. snip |
#15
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![]() "Roger Long" om wrote in message ... "Flying" reports that the accident rate is plummeting and quickly approaching 182 territory. That's no longer true after three accidents in less than a week. |
#16
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Huh? What "bald tire" bit?
"Dean Wilkinson" wrote in message m... Bull****! I have flown the SR22 and I thought it handled quite nicely. I question the piloting skills of anyone who would say something as inane about it as the bald tire bit listed below. It wasn't any harder to fly than a Piper Archer II. Dean "Michael 182" wrote in message news:3RQhc.2723$_L6.433903@attbi_s53... I haven't flown a Cirrus, ;( , so I can't speak to the flying characteristics. But the flight characteristics offered by "Toly": "but in the air the plane is very slippery and feels like it's skating on ice, only in three dimensions" sounds like a recipe for disaster, especially for a pilot that is rusty. One of the things I really like about my TR182 is that it like flying a rock. Yes, it is boring, and I have thought lately about trading it in for a fun airplane like a Maule or Citabria - but, in it's defense, when I haven't flown for a while it is incredibly forgiving of imperfect piloting. Michael "Jay Honeck" wrote in message news:OiQhc.2643$aQ6.415323@attbi_s51... There's been some discussion here about Cirrus' less-than-stellar safety record. snip |
#17
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![]() "Roger Long" om wrote in message ... "Flying" reports that the accident rate is plummeting and quickly approaching 182 territory. The Cirrus has 300% more fatal accidents than the new Cessna 182S. The Cirrus has 8 fatals and the 182 has 7. The 182's fleet is three times bigger than the Cirrus. |
#18
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![]() "Newps" wrote in message ... "Roger Long" om wrote in message ... "Flying" reports that the accident rate is plummeting and quickly approaching 182 territory. The Cirrus has 300% more fatal accidents than the new Cessna 182S. The Cirrus has 8 fatals and the 182 has 7. The 182's fleet is three times bigger than the Cirrus. Transititioning from something else to a 182 is, what, 10-20 hours at most? Wonder what an adequate transition time for a Cirrus would be? |
#19
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![]() "Jay Honeck" wrote: I've always heard this same thing said about the Bonanza... but recent accident stats for the Bo don't appear to bear this out. Actually, A36s are having a spell as bad as Cirruses over the last year or so, but anyhow... This (Cirrus accident rate) is starting to look like exactly what you were talking about in the subject line, i.e. a pilot problem. There's no trend in the accidents that points to any obvious Cirrus flaw except one: marketing. The Cirrus aircraft are touted as an escape from the bad old days of GA, so much safer because of their sophisticated avionics, simple controls, crashworthy cabins and ballistic parachutes. Starry-eyed, well-heeled pilots are going for all this in a big way. But all this cool new stuff doesn't change a thing about the way airplanes fly. Pilots who are seduced by the safety hype seem to be trying to exploit an edge the airplanes really aren't giving them, and it's getting some of them killed. -- Dan C172RG at BFM |
#20
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"Jay Honeck" wrote in message
I've always heard this same thing said about the Bonanza (the "Fork-tailed doctor killer") -- but recent accident stats for the Bo don't appear to bear this out. A good friend of mine has sold his Cherokee and is getting "training" in a Bo almost as I speak. He intends to buy into a partnership with his buddy who is the current owner and "acting CFI." This "CFI" hasn't had a certificate in years (bipolar) but flies his Bo regularly. He's got a ton of hours but has never been a CFI. He's so good that he brags of taking naps while Otto flies the plane for him. He ran out of fuel some months ago when he slept through the "E" on the fuel gauge. Landed in a field. No significant damage. Had the plane towed away before authorities found out about it. I've almost come to the conclusion that there are a very large, almost terrifying number of pilots who fall into the category defined by my friend and his bipolar buddy. I've no doubt that lot's of 'em fly Cirrus' (or is it "Cirii"?) Bo's 182's and Cherokees. -- Jim Fisher |
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