![]() |
If this is your first visit, be sure to check out the FAQ by clicking the link above. You may have to register before you can post: click the register link above to proceed. To start viewing messages, select the forum that you want to visit from the selection below. |
|
|
Thread Tools | Display Modes |
#1
|
|||
|
|||
![]()
I own a turbo Cessna 310 and I'm wondering if other turbo twin owners
do their biennial flight review in their aircraft. Is single engine work required for a flight review if done in a twin? I'm concered that doing the review in my aircraft may be hard on the engines, specifically the turbos. Would I be better off to just rent a single engine for the review? |
#2
|
|||
|
|||
![]()
chad wrote:
I own a turbo Cessna 310 and I'm wondering if other turbo twin owners do their biennial flight review in their aircraft. Is single engine work required for a flight review if done in a twin? I'm concered that doing the review in my aircraft may be hard on the engines, specifically the turbos. Would I be better off to just rent a single engine for the review? How do you figure flying for an hour will be hard on the engines? A flight review is not the same as the practical test. -- Jim Pennino Remove .spam.sux to reply. |
#3
|
|||
|
|||
![]() "chad" wrote in message ups.com... I own a turbo Cessna 310 and I'm wondering if other turbo twin owners do their biennial flight review in their aircraft. Is single engine work required for a flight review if done in a twin? I'm concered that doing the review in my aircraft may be hard on the engines, specifically the turbos. Would I be better off to just rent a single engine for the review? Explain your concern to the instructor before the flight and make sure he understands what things you *don't* want done with your engines. Then ask ask if s/he can give you a flight review without doing any of the things you consider problematic. And remember, you are PIC, so you can say "No, I don't want to do that out of concern for $50,000 of engines.." If you can't find an instructor who is comfortable with your rules, go ahead and rent a C-152 or whatever. It'll probably be cheaper than whatever it really costs you to run that 310 for an hour. KB |
#4
|
|||
|
|||
![]()
Take your review by getting signed off in a tail dragger... You will
learn more about airplane handling than a hundred hours of pointing your twin towards the horizon... denny |
#5
|
|||
|
|||
![]()
On 15 Feb 2007 18:00:06 -0800, "chad" wrote:
I own a turbo Cessna 310 and I'm wondering if other turbo twin owners do their biennial flight review in their aircraft. Is single engine work required for a flight review if done in a twin? I'm concered that doing the review in my aircraft may be hard on the engines, specifically the turbos. Would I be better off to just rent a single engine for the review? The flight portion of my BFRs have focused on basic maneuvers, stalls, slow flight, steep turns, and landings. These procedures pretty much dictate the engines will go through many high/low power cycles... Not the best for a turbo'd engine. If I was you, I would rent a single for the day. -Nathan |
#6
|
|||
|
|||
![]() "chad" wrote: I own a turbo Cessna 310 and I'm wondering if other turbo twin owners do their biennial flight review in their aircraft. Is single engine work required for a flight review if done in a twin? I'm concered that doing the review in my aircraft may be hard on the engines, specifically the turbos. Would I be better off to just rent a single engine for the review? Pardon the question from an ASEL owner, but what good is a BFR for a ME pilot that doesn't include engine-out procedures? -- Dan C-172RG at BFM |
#7
|
|||
|
|||
![]()
On Feb 16, 9:43 am, "Dan Luke" wrote:
"chad" wrote: I own a turbo Cessna 310 and I'm wondering if other turbo twin owners do their biennial flight review in their aircraft. Is single engine work required for a flight review if done in a twin? I'm concered that doing the review in my aircraft may be hard on the engines, specifically the turbos. Would I be better off to just rent a single engine for the review? Pardon the question from an ASEL owner, but what good is a BFR for a ME pilot that doesn't include engine-out procedures? -- Dan C-172RG at BFM The BFR is non plane specific, non maneuver specific, etc... The CFI can call for engine out procedures but that is exactly what he does not want his turbo engines to go through... If he does it in his plane, then he and the CFI have to decide what specific maneuvers will be done... Even though I learned to fly in conventional gear and flew such planes most of my youth (J3, T-craft, 120, 103, etc.) I have also spent the past few decades pushing twins towards the horizon... This past BFR I chose to renew my aquaintance with conventional gear by checking out in a PA-12... The reason for this one is that it returns me to the right hand stick, left hand throttle, world.. First ten minutes were fun breaking my right hand from moving when my brain called for power changes... By the end of the sessionI had the full stall landing working again and the hands sorted out... More fun that a bag full of monkeys... Gonna do it for the next BFR also... |
#8
|
|||
|
|||
![]()
Nathan Young wrote:
On 15 Feb 2007 18:00:06 -0800, "chad" wrote: I own a turbo Cessna 310 and I'm wondering if other turbo twin owners do their biennial flight review in their aircraft. Is single engine work required for a flight review if done in a twin? I'm concered that doing the review in my aircraft may be hard on the engines, specifically the turbos. Would I be better off to just rent a single engine for the review? The flight portion of my BFRs have focused on basic maneuvers, stalls, slow flight, steep turns, and landings. These procedures pretty much dictate the engines will go through many high/low power cycles... Not the best for a turbo'd engine. If I was you, I would rent a single for the day. -Nathan My last review focused on communications (center, tower, ground), airport area procedures, efficient use of the radios, using proper phraseology, etc. All the CFI's I know will pretty much do whatever you suggest you feel you could use some brush up on. There is no requirement to do basic maneuvers. If you are instrument rated, is there some procedure you are less than 100% at? If you are not instrument rated, when was the last time you did some hood time? -- Jim Pennino Remove .spam.sux to reply. |
#9
|
|||
|
|||
![]() "Denny" wrote: Pardon the question from an ASEL owner, but what good is a BFR for a ME pilot that doesn't include engine-out procedures? The BFR is non plane specific, non maneuver specific, etc... The CFI can call for engine out procedures but that is exactly what he does not want his turbo engines to go through... If he does it in his plane, then he and the CFI have to decide what specific maneuvers will be done... Even though I learned to fly in conventional gear and flew such planes most of my youth (J3, T-craft, 120, 103, etc.) I have also spent the past few decades pushing twins towards the horizon... This past BFR I chose to renew my aquaintance with conventional gear by checking out in a PA-12... The reason for this one is that it returns me to the right hand stick, left hand throttle, world.. First ten minutes were fun breaking my right hand from moving when my brain called for power changes... By the end of the session I had the full stall landing working again and the hands sorted out... More fun that a bag full of monkeys... Gonna do it for the next BFR also... Sounds like fun. I guess it's ok if you can say for sure your engine-out skills are sharp. A couple of my ME pilot acquaintances of mine couldn't truthfully make that statement. -- Dan C-172RG at BFM |
#10
|
|||
|
|||
![]()
On Feb 16, 6:35 am, Nathan Young wrote:
The flight portion of my BFRs have focused on basic maneuvers, stalls, slow flight, steep turns, and landings. These procedures pretty much dictate the engines will go through many high/low power cycles... Not the best for a turbo'd engine. If I was you, I would rent a single for the day. As a CFI I would not sign a guy off in a single for a BFR if I know his daily flying is a turbo twin. However, we could probably do the flight review in the twin without putting too much stress on his engines. Or, he could rent a twin. -Robert, CFII |
Thread Tools | |
Display Modes | |
|
|
![]() |
||||
Thread | Thread Starter | Forum | Replies | Last Post |
Online Flight Review Course | john smith | Piloting | 1 | May 29th 06 02:02 AM |
Electronic review of flight? | Al | Instrument Flight Rules | 19 | December 30th 05 09:51 PM |
Turbo performance vs non-turbo | John Doe | Owning | 22 | October 8th 05 02:34 AM |
Non-TW CFI cannot give Flight Review in TW | Hilton | Piloting | 12 | January 19th 04 10:31 PM |
Converting engine from Turbo to non-Turbo | Dick Kurtz | Home Built | 7 | October 31st 03 04:48 PM |