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#81
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#82
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![]() "R. Hubbell" wrote: On Thu, 13 Nov 2003 14:45:11 -0800 Jeff wrote: losing 1 of 2 is better then losing 1 of 1 .. ka-boom Not for my wallet. You don't have to pay for the hospital or funeral expenses? George Patterson If you're not part of the solution, you can make a lot of money prolonging the problem. |
#83
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![]() "Newps" wrote in message news:zhWsb.140377$mZ5.969124@attbi_s54... Stu Gotts wrote: The high insurance cost is attributed to the inability to properly repair any damage. Almost any "bend" is a break and the thing is a total. Sooner or later someone will come up with a way to fix them as easily as they do Corvettes. They can be fixed very easily today. Any mechanic who has worked with both will tell you that the metal airplane is harder to fix and takes longer. Cosmetic damage, yes. Structural damage no way. Even the Cirrus web site alludes to that. |
#84
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prices. I was in the market for about an '85 model Bo or 210 a while
back, but now I'd seriously think about spending a little more and getting a Cirrus. A little more? How about double! - Mark |
#85
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I dont agree with fixed gear being safer in IMC, I have a turbo arrow and
putting the gear down is second nature. By the time you get to your FAF you have it in landing configuration, no problems.. The issue is not forgetting to put your landing gear down. This is not a serious safety concern in retracts because leaving the wheels up on landing is damaging only to the pilot's pocketbook. There are almost never any injuries. The safety issue is loss of control, something casual, non-professional pilots do all too often. Retracts are MUCH more susceptible to loss of control accidents due to the much quicker speed buildup when control is lost. (Retract pilots should be trained to lower the landing gear the first sign of an upset -- gear damage due to excessive speed be damned -- but they typically don't.) Retract singles have approximately twice the fatal accident rate of fixed-gear singles. This trend holds generally and holds for comparable aircraft which are otherwise identical except for their gear (e.g., C182 vs. C182RG, Cherokee Six vs. Saratoga, etc.). A retract is much more likely to kill you. - Mark |
#86
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not a factor, I have an auto pilot, if it goes out, fly the instruments,
it does not take much to get out of an unusual attitude. I own a retract, I fly it in IMC. I guess you're just a great pilot. But for us average pilots, loss of control is a very big concern. (I'd love to put you in a simulator and start introducing random instrument failures in heavy turbulence while flying a tough approach. Hmmm .... the turn coordinator and horizon don't seem to agree. Which is right? You've got about five seconds to figure it out before you die.) - Mark |
#87
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Why? The Cirrus is roomier than the Bo and has better designed seats.
This reminds me of the ridiculous argument that the Mooney folks use to make about their planes being wider and roomier than a Bonanza. I've flown hundreds of hours in Mooneys and hundreds of hours in Bonanzas. There is NO comparison - the Bonanza is much more comfortable. I haven't flown hundreds of hours in a Cirrus, but I've sat in them for 20-minutes at a stretch at Oshkosh. They're very well-designed, have nice seats, and are quite comfortable, but there is no comparison on room. And you can get seats that match a new Cirrus in comfort by spending a couple grand, which you can easily afford with the $150K you saved in acquisition costs. Don't be get me wrong - the new designs have their merits. But don't drink the kool-aid and think these planes have made some quantum leap ahead in anything other than avionics. - Mark |
#88
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And by the way, Bonanzas certainly don't have
anything to brag about, safetywise. Well, I don't know about that. The numbers for Bonanza are actually pretty good. Overall, they're right in the averages for single-retracts. Exclude the early v-tails (up to about 1960) and they're better than average. Include just the F33A and A36 straight-tails, and they're about best in the fleet, only slightly below the best (C182RG). The rates are noticeably better than the C210 and big Cherokee retracts. Someone is probably going to cry foul over excluding the early Bonanzas, but pre-1960 airplanes have very poor accident rates in general and it doesn't make sense to me to compare the accident rates of a brand new design with one first produced in 1947. A 1980 Bonanza is quite a different airplane from a 1947 V-tail. - Mark |
#89
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Stu,
You're obviously not an owner! And your point is? Just to clarify mine: A Bonanza owner will hardly dislike the Bo - for Pete's sake, he bought one. For a more balanced view, you might have to ask other people. And it's ok that some people like brand B, while other like brand C better. That's subjective. But some of the things discussed in this thread are objective facts - let's at least get those straight. -- Thomas Borchert (EDDH) |
#90
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Stu,
And you have what? A little more than an hour in each? Well, an hour was what YOU claimed was enough, wasn't it? (I have more, rest assured) Stu, there's no need to get upset, we're just trading opinions here. And trying to get some facts straight. BTW, there are no 30 year old aircraft that come even close to the level of interior design you find in a modern "plastic" aircraft, IMHO. -- Thomas Borchert (EDDH) |
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