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25 is magic number



 
 
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  #1  
Old February 10th 04, 08:21 PM
tongaloa
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Default 25 is magic number

mission requirements
250 kt cruise
2500 kt range
250 lb (pilot and 'stuff')
25,000 ft cruise altitude

doable?


  #2  
Old February 10th 04, 10:04 PM
O-ring Seals
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On Tue, 10 Feb 2004 15:21:50 -0500, tongaloa
wrote:

mission requirements
250 kt cruise
2500 kt range
250 lb (pilot and 'stuff')
25,000 ft cruise altitude

doable?




Sure. As long as the 'stuff" does not include fuel; and if size,
weight, and cost are not important to you. BTW, range is not
expressed in 'kt'. A Cessna 421 may be just about right for you.
Sounds like a troll, but I an responding anyway.

O-ring Seals
  #3  
Old February 10th 04, 10:09 PM
Rich S.
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"O-ring Seals" wrote in message
...
On Tue, 10 Feb 2004 15:21:50 -0500, tongaloa
wrote:

mission requirements
250 kt cruise
2500 kt range
250 lb (pilot and 'stuff')
25,000 ft cruise altitude

doable?




Sure. As long as the 'stuff" does not include fuel; and if size,
weight, and cost are not important to you. BTW, range is not
expressed in 'kt'. A Cessna 421 may be just about right for you.
Sounds like a troll, but I an responding anyway.

O-ring Seals


Hey Bob........

How 'bout strapping a saddle on a V-1 or a Baka Bomb???

Rich S.


  #4  
Old February 11th 04, 04:36 PM
Bob Kuykendall
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Default

Earlier, tongaloa wrote:

mission requirements
250 kt cruise
2500 kt range
250 lb (pilot and 'stuff')
25,000 ft cruise altitude

doable?


Sure. For about $250,000.



Bob K.
  #5  
Old February 11th 04, 05:06 PM
tongaloa
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O-ring Seals wrote:
On Tue, 10 Feb 2004 15:21:50 -0500, tongaloa
wrote:


mission requirements
250 kt cruise
2500 kt range
250 lb (pilot and 'stuff')
25,000 ft cruise altitude

doable?





Sure. As long as the 'stuff" does not include fuel; and if size,
weight, and cost are not important to you. BTW, range is not
expressed in 'kt'. A Cessna 421 may be just about right for you.
Sounds like a troll, but I an responding anyway.

O-ring Seals



Not a troll.

Living in HI and wanting to travel in Pacific.
Size and weight are considerations, hence the 250lb
limit for pilot and 'stuff'(change of cloths, some tools, water, oil).
Fuel efficiency is a consideration with Pacific prices.
Speed and range matter for say HNL-NSTU-FUN. Fuel is often not
available at FUN.

-t






  #6  
Old February 11th 04, 06:17 PM
Corky Scott
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rlier, tongaloa wrote:

mission requirements
250 kt cruise
2500 kt range
250 lb (pilot and 'stuff')
25,000 ft cruise altitude


The 2500 mile range is likely doable, after all, Lindbergh managed it
with 1927 technology. What he did was take an airplane and modify it
so that it was a flying gas tank. That required a number of
modifications to the original airframe to beef it up so it would hold
that much gas and not collaps when landing or clap the wings in
turbulence. He also had a gas tank in front of him such that it
totally blocked any view straight ahead. He compensated for that but
hanging his head out the open window. Not something I'd recommend at
25,000 feet. You've heard of the Voyager, Dick Rutan and Jeanna
Yeager flew it around the world with what they carried internally for
gas. That was a one off type airplane, and Burt Rutan has designed
another to duplicate the feat, this time jet powered and it will fly a
lot higher and faster than the Voyager.

The 25000 mile cruise altitude is of course obtainable, you just need
to size the wings accordingly and supercharge the engine somehow.
It's not new, it's done all the time by certified airframe
manufacturers. You'll need full time oxygen at that altitude, and a
lot of it if you are traveling 2,500 miles.

The big problem to me is the 250 kt cruise speed. There aren't many
singles that can manage that, those that do are running a pretty big
or they aren't big or both. Pretty big engines pulling an airplane
along at 250 kts don't get great milage, but perhaps that can be
compensated for by putting in enough fuel tanks. But then the wings
get larger and cost more drag and you have to beef up the airframe in
order to be safe and now you need more power to pull it through the
air. Tis a dilemma.

You are probably talking about a one-off type airplane. Maybe you
should speak with Mr. Rutan.

Corky Scott
  #7  
Old February 11th 04, 08:51 PM
tongaloa
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Default

Corky Scott wrote:
rlier, tongaloa wrote:

mission requirements
250 kt cruise
2500 kt range
250 lb (pilot and 'stuff')
25,000 ft cruise altitude



The 2500 mile range is likely doable, after all, Lindbergh managed it
with 1927 technology. What he did was take an airplane and modify it
so that it was a flying gas tank. That required a number of
modifications to the original airframe to beef it up so it would hold
that much gas and not collaps when landing or clap the wings in
turbulence. He also had a gas tank in front of him such that it
totally blocked any view straight ahead. He compensated for that but
hanging his head out the open window. Not something I'd recommend at
25,000 feet. You've heard of the Voyager, Dick Rutan and Jeanna
Yeager flew it around the world with what they carried internally for
gas. That was a one off type airplane, and Burt Rutan has designed
another to duplicate the feat, this time jet powered and it will fly a
lot higher and faster than the Voyager.

The 25000 mile cruise altitude is of course obtainable, you just need
to size the wings accordingly and supercharge the engine somehow.
It's not new, it's done all the time by certified airframe
manufacturers. You'll need full time oxygen at that altitude, and a
lot of it if you are traveling 2,500 miles.

The big problem to me is the 250 kt cruise speed. There aren't many
singles that can manage that, those that do are running a pretty big
or they aren't big or both. Pretty big engines pulling an airplane
along at 250 kts don't get great milage, but perhaps that can
compensated for by putting in enough fuel tanks. But then the wings
get larger and cost more drag and you have to beef up the airframe in
order to be safe and now you need more power to pull it through the
air. Tis a dilemma.

You are probably talking about a one-off type airplane. Maybe you
should speak with Mr. Rutan.

Corky Scott


Well maybe, since I can't speak to Ted Smith.
Was posting in the event that someone might have done some paper
scratching and cared to reveal.

-t





  #8  
Old February 11th 04, 09:11 PM
Morgans
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Posts: n/a
Default


"Corky Scott" wrote
mission requirements
250 kt cruise
2500 kt range
250 lb (pilot and 'stuff')
25,000 ft cruise altitude


You are probably talking about a one-off type airplane. Maybe you
should speak with Mr. Rutan.

Corky Scott


How about a CJ, or a falcon?
--
Jim in NC


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  #9  
Old February 11th 04, 11:47 PM
Nathan Young
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On Tue, 10 Feb 2004 15:21:50 -0500, tongaloa
wrote:

mission requirements
250 kt cruise
2500 kt range
250 lb (pilot and 'stuff')
25,000 ft cruise altitude


250kt cruise is really pushing it in a piston engined airplane. A 421
can max out at 250kts, but cruise will be more like 220-230kt. The
only exception might be a Lancair IV-P and this was posted to the
homebuilt newsgroup, so that's a thought.

2500nm range is not do-able in any production light aircraft, and for
that matter probably isn't do-able in any reasonable homebuilt
aircraft. Many corporate jets do not have that kind of range.

250 lb useful load is easy - any plane that comes close to the other
specs will have this useful load.

25000 cruise altitude is attainable via turbocharged engines, and will
likely be a requirement to hit 250kt cruise.

-Nathan


  #10  
Old February 12th 04, 10:06 PM
tongaloa
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Default

Nathan Young wrote:
On Tue, 10 Feb 2004 15:21:50 -0500, tongaloa
wrote:


mission requirements
250 kt cruise
2500 kt range
250 lb (pilot and 'stuff')
25,000 ft cruise altitude



250kt cruise is really pushing it in a piston engined airplane. A 421
can max out at 250kts, but cruise will be more like 220-230kt. The
only exception might be a Lancair IV-P and this was posted to the
homebuilt newsgroup, so that's a thought.


Will have a look.
Aerostar does 250kt OK at 25000. TIO 540's.
Range is limited by 38-42GPH and gross - empty = 2000 lb.

Looking for single that can do the 250kt and max gross - empty = big
enough number for fuel plus 250lb.


 




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