- Joined
- May 18, 2007
- Messages
- 6,809
- Display Name
Display name:
jsstevens
Yep. George Washington’s hatchet. 2 new heads and 5 new handles but it’s the same hatchet.I'll bet when you get it flying it will be a new aircraft
Yep. George Washington’s hatchet. 2 new heads and 5 new handles but it’s the same hatchet.I'll bet when you get it flying it will be a new aircraft
I suspect that it was mostly VFR pilots flying into IMC with the predictable outcome.
now....ya can't blame the airplane for that. Exceed physics....and we repeat the same old science experiment."It was determined from wreckage that when the airplane was operated in excess of the never exceed speed, the unsecured leading edge of the stabilizer would fail first, in an up or down direction. Even though the airplane met the certification standards, it was determined that anchoring the leading edge of the stabilizer to the fuselage at the root would minimize this and give the pilot a little extra time to recover from an overspeed condition."
Is it not a simple case of "know your aircraft"?now....ya can't blame the airplane for that. Exceed physics....and we repeat the same old science experiment.
Tom.....think about that for just a few seconds.Is it not a simple case of "know your aircraft"?
Think an A-36 conventional tail would do the same ?
Yeah, what I've read is that this flaw revealed itself when the aircraft went outside the normal flight envelope, i.e. after the pilot had undergone spatial disorientation.From the little research I did, it appears that there was an initial "design flaw" if you want to call it that... There was a significant amount of the tail surface that wasn't supported forward of the attach point... Under some flight conditions (extreme) the leading edge could be twisted causing a catastrophic failure... A relatively simple fix was the addition of a collar that secures the leading edge to the fuselage...
Right... That said...How many airplanes would NOT come from together flying outside its Never Exceed envelope?Yeah, what I've read is that this flaw revealed itself when the aircraft went outside the normal flight envelope, i.e. after the pilot had undergone spatial disorientation.
Mine. I've read quite a few stories...Right... That said...How many airplanes would NOT come from together flying outside its Never Exceed envelope?
full disclosure....if you keep them trimmed and fly with two fingers....they won't overspeed. Just say'n. That's how mine does....The V-tails are extremely slick airplanes. It’s easy to redline it just from going into a decent from cruise without powering back. Thats not dissimilar to even modern high performance jets or aircraft.
The main reason why they had issues up front is the same reason why the Cirrus had such a bad accident rate for a while. People upgrade from slower trainers (that have the aerodynamics of a brick but fly much further away from their limits) and hop in a high performance single where there’s a lot less forgiveness for flying off the numbers. The Cirrus and Bo are both clear demonstrations that if you take a high performance single past it’s limits bad things happen.
full disclosure....if you keep them trimmed and fly with two fingers....they won't overspeed. Just say'n. That's how mine does....
the clean ones....Which two fingers do you recommend?
the clean ones....
because....I always wash.....before entering the cock-pit.Why they have to be clean? Maybe ya just changed the oil and want to fly around the patch, no time to wash them hands.
because....I always wash.....before entering the cock-pit.
Exactly. Point is though that if you do that in a less power plane it’s bad practice but you won’t break anything.full disclosure....if you keep them trimmed and fly with two fingers....they won't overspeed. Just say'n. That's how mine does....
You're not going to go pushing the yoke forward for the carrier descent/landing....it won't fly well like that.
I thought the V Tail Bonanzas had CG issues?
Is it not a simple case of "know your aircraft"?
Think an A-36 conventional tail would do the same ?
full disclosure....if you keep them trimmed and fly with two fingers....they won't overspeed. Just say'n. That's how mine does....
You're not going to go pushing the yoke forward for the carrier descent/landing....it won't fly well like that.
Vindicated ?? Why would I need vindication for advising any buyer of a Bonanza to do there home work. That is how this conversation got started when you took offense .Does that make you feel vindicated Tom?
I do not have the tools to do it properly. So none.How many Bonanzas do you annual Tom?
Thank you.I do not have the tools to do it properly. So none.
It has never happened.
It's still a pretty good demo of what happens. (even in real life)Your best argument is a video of an RC glider? After all of your trolling... A RADIO CONTROLLED GLIDER???
C'mon, man.
Vindicated ?? Why would I need vindication for advising any buyer of a Bonanza to do there home work. That is how this conversation got started when you took offense .
....and which recurring Arrow ADs will kill if not complied with?So if the OP decided on the Arrow, you would be ok if he didnt do his homework? Just buyers of Bo's are the ones that need to check AD's, reviews and opinions?
Awe hell folks, just buy the pretty one, the first annual will take care of the mechanical stuff.So if the OP decided on the Arrow, you would be ok if he didnt do his homework? Just buyers of Bo's are the ones that need to check AD's, reviews and opinions?
Gee Tom....sounds like yer all over the place on this.Awe hell folks, just buy the pretty one, the first annual will take care of the mechanical stuff.
No, just seems to me there are those who never catch on. So let them get screwed. some A&P-IA needs a 401k retirement system.Gee Tom....sounds like yer all over the place on this.