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![]() "Doug Vetter" wrote in message et... The SR20's limit of 12000 hours is still too limiting, IMHO, but I can appreciate the FAA's conservatism regarding any new (indeed revolutionary) design. I was told by a Diamond rep that the Diamond aircraft do not have airframe life limits. I would consider them to be just as revolutionary as the Cirrus. However, I have not looked up the Diamond's type certificates to verify the rep's claims. However, I must disagree with the comment about the airplanes "falling out of the sky" -- we just touched on this in Jay's thread. This has NOTHING to do with the airplane. It has EVERYTHING to do with pilots with more money than skill flying them. Actually, it has EVERYTHING (sic) to do with the airplane, whether it is some design flaw that causes them to disintegrate or whether it is a design flaw that makes them too difficult to fly for the pilots that are buying them. In any event, I think the FAA will eventually order Cirrus to get to the bottom of it, no matter what the cause. The FAA nearly grounded Cirrus with the first rash of accidents. I doubt that their patience with Cirrus is unlimited. The pilot in Florida had 600 hours in type, was instrument rated, and was a founder of the Cirrus Pilots Association. That does not fit the description of "more money than skill." The Cirrus cannot recover from a spin or even an incipient spin. Pilots are supposed to deploy the chute if the Cirrus enters a spin. Fine, if you are 900' AGL or more. Probably more, if the chute takes longer to deploy when the airplane is in a spin. So a departure stall or approach stall in this airplane is going to be far more dangerous than in other aircraft. And let us be clear he stalls were a factor in a large percentage of the Cirrus accidents so far. Given that the most common GA accident is low level maneuvering: the slick design of the Cirrus, the inadequate flaps, the poor stall handling abilities, pilot unfamiliarity with the new equipment (which also keeps pilots' eyes inside the cockpit), poor maintenance and quality control, and the inability of the parachute to deploy at low altitude all seem to me to add up to a lot of trouble. |
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