bflynn
Final Approach
Dang, really? What kind of club are you in?
a big, busy one. Currently 14 airplanes and around 300 actively flying members.
I might be underestimating the hours.
Dang, really? What kind of club are you in?
Never mind. Here ya go:
"Federal Aviation Administration studies indicate that piston engines in aircraft have a failure rate, on average, of one every 3,200 flight hours while turbine engines have a failure rate of one per 375,000 flight hours. Accordingly, for every turbine engine experiencing a failure, 117 piston engines will have failed."
hey who cares how many times i posted i just read this and thought i may have something to contribute ive owned 2 cirrus sr22s and a columbia 400 andAlways the new guys with single digit posts reviving the dead.
I found out recently that my company (primarily O&G manufacturing) makes a component that is part of the Cirrus CAPS. Your lives are at my mercy . . . lol.
O&G? Oxen and goats.
Fits right in with Cirrus drivers! Every Cirrus should come with a gold-plated speculum just in case,lol.Pretty sure it's obstetrics and gynecology...
Fits right in with Cirrus drivers!
Did the occupants come down in a tandem harness as in your last Cirrus training video?Right. Not in the POH but in the CAPS guidance syllabus provided by Cirrus there are lots of references to those figures.
It's 600 agl.8 seconds in the older models. I believe 10 or 12 in the newer ones. My min pull altitude is 500 agl. I think the newer ones it is 1000.
Lol no.hot fuel has a history of doing bad things at altitude....so to prevent vapor in your fuel lines some recommend running the pump while "at" cruise.
Turbine engines have very few moving part to fail, and the stress on a turbine is not cyclical (aka vibrational) like pistons swapping directions a few dozen times per second.Never mind. Here ya go:
"Federal Aviation Administration studies indicate that piston engines in aircraft have a failure rate, on average, of one every 3,200 flight hours while turbine engines have a failure rate of one per 375,000 flight hours. Accordingly, for every turbine engine experiencing a failure, 117 piston engines will have failed."