Got a link to the accident article?
http://www.kathrynsreport.com/2021/06/cirrus-sr20-n89423-fatal-accident.html?m=1
Got a link to the accident article?
@danuary - any update?
Unfortunately no, pursuing this has taken a backseat to other priorities. Another time. I did however decide against the Cirrus route. I felt it would be too expensive and too much all at once.
@wayne wow!!!
I wonder how long it would take a 105 knot person to transition to an SR22 and whether the IR is required . . . And whether I could stay proficient.
Hmmmm
That's the thing about using a complex plane as a trainer. They cost more, in this case quite a bit more. Unless you have an unlimited budget, that increases the pressure to fly less. The last thing you want when getting your PPL is to cut corners on practice hours. You need to fly as much as needed to develop the airmanship and control feel that makes you a pilot, not just a machinery operator.
Unfortunately no, pursuing this has taken a backseat to other priorities. Another time. I did however decide against the Cirrus route. I felt it would be too expensive and too much all at once.
Your bias is showing. Show some evidence and some facts behind such broad statements.And in a Cirrus you won't learn as much about stalls and spins as another aircraft with a legitimate recovery procedure (one that's not "pull the chute"). Cirruses are not trainers.
Sorry to hear it's been put on the back burner, but sometimes life happens, or priorities change. I own a part of a Cirrus and love flying it, but I would definitely recommend doing your Private in something cheaper, such as a Cessna 172. If the six-pack versus is cheaper to rent than the G1000 I'd fly the six-pack model. You don't need a G1000 for the Private.
Then maybe shift to the Cirrus for, during or right after your Instrument Rating. There are pros and cons on when to switch.
Your bias is showing. Show some evidence and some facts behind such broad statements.
Tim
Um, the spin limitations of the Cirrus are common knowledge.
Spin training has NOT been part of PPL training for decades. Further, the number of "training" aircraft which can actually perform spins is rather limited compared to previous decades.
Full stalls and spin awareness have always been part of PPL training and all training aircraft other than Cirrus have proven ability to recover from unintentional spins with conventional, non-destructive recovery technique.
Full stalls have been removed from the requirements of a PPL. The Cirrus planes were spin tested for European licensing. They recovered fine. Cirrus managed to talk the FAA into the chute being the spin recovery, but the Europeans didn't allow that.
Full stalls and spin awareness have always been part of PPL training and all training aircraft other than Cirrus have proven ability to recover from unintentional spins with conventional, non-destructive recovery technique.
Spin awareness and stall recovery are taught in Cirrus. I went through it, not a big deal
Really not that scary, fly to the stall horn, not through it.
You got a watered-down, inadequate version of it, since according to our last discussion on this topic you stated you were taught to recover at the horn.
https://www.pilotsofamerica.com/com...us-should-you-train-in-a-cirrus.126293/page-2
You got a watered-down, inadequate version of it, since according to our last discussion on this topic you stated you were taught to recover at the horn.
https://www.pilotsofamerica.com/com...us-should-you-train-in-a-cirrus.126293/page-2
If that’s true, the root problem is that he’s focused on The wrong things in the first place. It takes about 10 minutes to learn to read an analog ASI and Altimeter, which is just about all you need of the six pack during PPL training. Look out the freaking window.I disagree. One of my son's friends is working on his PPL. He grew in a digital world, he has struggled with the C172 six pack he rents. One flight in the new G1000 changed everything for him.
Also, when you add up the costs to "convert" you skills from a six pack to a PFD, you will find that you likely did not save any money and in fact spent a lot more.
Tim
-this really isn't true. I did the official 10 part Cirrus transition for the SR20 and then a few years later an SR22T. The courses were comprehensive, and I used two different CSIPS for each. Both went to a full stall, wing drop and all, several times. We didn't do it in the SR22 but in the SR20 we did the whole falling leaf hold-it-in-a-stall thing. It's no 172 or PA28.. but it's not an immediate lose control death trap, and to the point about proper recovery procedures there was planning of stall practice around coordination, wing drops, etc. And yes, a brief that if a proper spin was entered and recovery was not immediate (using standard procedures) to pull the chute. Luckily it didn't come to that, even in a full stick held back falling leaf situation if you 'step on the ball' it's not too crazyAnd in a Cirrus you won't learn as much about stalls and spins as another aircraft with a legitimate recovery procedure (one that's not "pull the chute")
..and often misquoted. For European certification the Cirrus was required to do a series of spins, the whole 'pull the chute' wasn't satisfactory so there were something like 43 (35?) full on spins performed. Each time the plane recovered normally. The chute was also added as a result of a mid-air accident that was very personal to the Klapmeier family.. not because 'it couldn't recover from a spin so the FAA required a chute' .. however, if you have a chute, why not use it? It's like criticizing someone for putting on a life jacket when the boat sinks (real mariners swim like men!)spin limitations of the Cirrus are common knowledge
..and this is why while I generally see no issue in doing primary in 172 / PA-28 as a cost saving measure to get down the basics.. BUT, if your long term plan is to be flying a Cirrus you really need to do the proper syllabus in it, or just learn in it.. a one hour checkout won't cut it. It's different enough that if you are used to moping around the pattern at 75 knots in a 172 something like an even an SR-20 is going to be a big change.pilots who transitioned to Cirrus from other planes
Cirrus has two very distinct "stalls". With "two" wings, the wing root stalls first and the nose starts to drop. If you look closely you will see that there is roughly a 3 degree total difference in camber between the wing sections.
That means from the time the wing root stalls you need to raise the nose another three degrees to increase the AOA on the outboard sections. This is not easy, and I know of only two ways to get there. Either you do it in a steep bank and rapidly pull back on the elevators, or you start with an aft CG, zoom climb with the engine on idle and pull the elevators full back. The first is obviously a great way to spin the plane, the second does not seem like a great way to fly either.
Do not forget Cirrus was designed under a change in FAA philosophy. The plane is "spin/stall" resistant versus recovery; most aerodynamic changes that increase "stall/spin" resistance actually make recover harder also.
Last point, pull the NTSB reports. You see almost no stall/spin in Cirrus when the plane was used as a training aircraft. The super majority of stall/spin reports I have read about in Cirrus are pilots who transitioned to Cirrus from other planes, with anecdotally no notes about Cirrus specific transition training (when Cirrus specific training is done, it seems like it usually is noted).
Tim
If that’s true, the root problem is that he’s focused on The wrong things in the first place. It takes about 10 minutes to learn to read an analog ASI and Altimeter, which is just about all you need of the six pack during PPL training. Look out the freaking window.
Or you just be patient and wait for the airspeed to decay and the airplane will fully stall. The Cirrus gives plenty of warning for the stall, sometimes it seems like forever, but it will happen without extreme control inputs. Power on in a 22 is 80 percent power, get the nose to 20 degrees pitch up, increase right rudder as you slow and wait for it. Power off is just enough elevator to keep the airspeed bleeding off, rumble, bitching Betty complains for a little bit then the nose drops. Nbd. Banked / accelerated stalls, just stay coordinated, and nothing surprising happens.
Recovery is easy and sure. If a wing drops, step on the opposite rudder, nudge a little aileron in if it makes you feel better, recover and you are good to go. They handle awesomely.
I understand that. But, we learned how to tell time on a "multi-hand dial" at, what, about 5 or 6 years old? I think an adult can figure it out in less than an hour.If you never had an analog dial in your life, it takes a lot longer to read. Digital clocks,, digital thermometers, digital watch.... In my house, we have exactly two analog dials in the whole house. My watch, and my wife's.
My youngest is a senior in high school, she was never taught how to read a dial; especially a multi-hand dial like the altimeter.
Tim
Learning to fly in a Cirrus is definitely doable. I took over a student who owned his own Cirrus and finished up his Private, and later his Instrument.
That said, I think there's a lot to be said for learning the basic stick and rudder skills in a simpler plane. Even if money is no object, I feel there's benefit to having fewer distractions when learning the basics.
I think that because younger people are incredibly adept at working with technology is exactly why their first airplane experience should be flying something that doesn't have a lot of technology. Because to me, a pilot needs to first learn how to fly the plane with his or her head looking out the window. I believe that makes for safer pilots. At the other end of the spectrum is someone who can barely fly themselves, and is more of a computer operator. I don't think that detracts from the Cirrus as an airplane. Just my 2 cents.
Funny thread, in that I see a lot of plugs for 172s, and unless I missed it, no mentions of 152s.
Unless you’re particularly big or heavy, or want to train with a CFI who is, a 152 is less expensive, and every bit as good as a 172 for someone starting out. Some even think better.
I rent 172s when I’m taking another person somewhere, for comfort.
but if I’m going somewhere close solo, or doing currency work? 152s. I like the control feel.
Some things are harder to learn in the Cirrus (for example, the electrical system is more complex than in most trainers). Others are easier, in that the Cirrus masks poor technique better in some cases than other trainers. Which makes me say that it would be even more beneficial for a Cirrus student to also get some taildragger exposure during the training, to prevent forming of bad habits which may be OK most days in the Cirrus but can bite you under the right circumstances.
- Martin