I’ve never heard of an operator with the 15% GTOW relief in Alaska.
That isn’t to say that rounding errors do not occur.
That isn’t to say that rounding errors do not occur.
FYI: you'll find these 91.323 affected aircraft were mostly pre-1950 aircraft and are no longer used as far as I know. It was an old rule requirement to keep 135/121 ops going when the CAA started to run things on their own.I’ve never heard of an operator with the 15% GTOW relief in Alaska.
FYI: you'll find these 91.323 affected aircraft were mostly pre-1950 aircraft and are no longer used as far as I know. It was an old rule requirement to keep 135/121 ops going when the CAA started to run things on their own.
That isn’t to say that rounding errors do not occur.
How useful is a plane that can fly 10 straight hours and not have an occupant need a bathroom break?
The max GW is based on drop tests and potential for prop strike on a hard landing. New stiffer gear upgrade ups MGW to 1950 lb.
How useful is a plane that can fly 10 straight hours and not have an occupant need a bathroom break?
And if I needed another reason to be thankful for ownershipSome of us aren’t fat and can handle longer trips. I know for a fact I can currently do 4 hours without using the Gatorade bottle, and could probably do 8-10 with it if I planned my food the day before correctly. Would I use ALL of that gas frequently? No, but it makes the airplane more flexible. Leave out 7 gallons from the extended tanks and I’d have 50 pounds for baggage.
-this was very eye opening to me when I was learning to fly, and shortly after getting my license. That beautiful Bonanza sitting on the ramp really can't necessarily carry any more weight than the 172 I was flying (it had the 180 conversion).. heck, there are 6 place twins out there (I'm looking at you, some of the new Seneca) that have shameful usefuls. It's my biggest issue with small GA.. and why I'm happy I found the Aztec. So what it burns 24-30 gph in cruise and "only" goes 170 knots, it's worth it if I can actually use the damn thing!Most non trainer aircraft you can carry gas or folks
I completely agree. And the argument that "just don't fill it to the top" is a fatuous one.. who actually has a totalizer / fuel gauges they trust that much and has the ability to off load fuel easily..?? anyone? Let's say you flew alone with full tanks, you only did an hour and you filled it because gas was cheap at the podunk place you went for lunch. Oh surprise, the next weekend you decide to take an impromptu trip and need to take your wife, son, dog, and bags for a weekend to someplace 300 miles away.. good luck offloading 40+ gallons and doing it safely/accurately and threading that line between between overweight and having enough gasWhat totally doesn't make sense is having an airplane that with full flow it can take only 170lb extra
Mine can fly for 20 and I find it very useful.
I'm a fairly new private pilot
Rounding errors.... similar to pocket gas.??
I have a stick. It is just. stick, didn't cost anything, I found it on the ground. As I filled the tank I marked it with the amount of gas I put in. The thing is actually 5 gallons off (there was 5 gallons in the tank when I started). No worry, I add 5 to the reading.I completely agree. And the argument that "just don't fill it to the top" is a fatuous one.. who actually has a totalizer / fuel gauges they trust that much and has the ability to off load fuel easily..?? anyone? Let's say you flew alone with full tanks, you only did an hour and you filled it because gas was cheap at the podunk place you went for lunch. Oh surprise, the next weekend you decide to take an impromptu trip and need to take your wife, son, dog, and bags for a weekend to someplace 300 miles away.. good luck offloading 40+ gallons and doing it safely/accurately and threading that line between between overweight and having enough gas
'Go places' planes like the Mooney, Bonanza, etc., should be able to safely cover 500-600 nm in one leg, with the airplane's seats and interior volume reasonably occupied. Piper really did at least do this part correctly, most PA-28 will carry at least 800 lbs and the Six / Lance / Aztec all do really well with useful loads. Bonanza are pretty but they're realistically a 2-3 person plane if you're actually using it to go places
You evaluated the airplane's load capability in the presence of a gust while taking off at max gross weight. Impressive, but you should focus on the flying. MTOGW is not only performance.My test pilot was Max Conrad. If he can do it...
I have never flown over gross weight in the Comanche. However, having taken off at max gross (actually weighed everyone and their gear) with OAT over 80F, I know they undershot what it can actually fly at and be safe.
.I'm a fairly new private pilot.
During training, and my flying afterwards I've always made my W&B and have always flown inside weight and cg limits.
How is that there are airplanes that can barely take a person when full of fuel? I'm looking at a Mooney M20k, with extended fuel tanks, that with full fuel it is just 170lb under MTOW.
Then in this 170lb you need to fit backpack, pilots clothes and pilots own weight.
I'm sure that an airplane like this most likely was never flown full of fuel or it has exceeded it's MTOW.
So, my silly question is: what's the deal with fyling heavier than MTOW? Apart from the fact that is ilegal...
As long as a CG is within limits, flying a 2900 lb airplane with a 200lb overweight, is that risky? Does people sometimes take off above max to weight?
..and your tanks are probably not unreasonably huge. Most PA-28 also have around 900 or so useful, at least.. with 50 gallon tanks topped off you can still get 3-4 people in there, depending and with 50 gallons fly a solid 4 hrs.. pretty much at the limit of the amount of time most want to sit in a small GA, esp as passengerThe nice thing about my airplane is it can lift close to a thousand pounds
You evaluated the airplane's load capability in the presence of a gust while taking off at max gross weight. Impressive, but you should focus on the flying. MTOGW is not only performance.
The OP is talking about a plane that, with full tanks, basically makes it a one (skinny) person plane. What's the point of tanks that huge? With the M20K miserly fuel burn are you every really going to need more than 50-60 gallons anyway? For 75% of your trips.
Seriously? So one pilot can fly longer range if they want to? Or tanker that delicious inexpensive fuel sometimes discovered?
I don't know why "full tanks" is magical. Fuel loadouts can and should be managed. I think anyone relying on "full fuel" leaving them some specific desired remaining payload is just being lazy.
It's not magical, but it's an added task for something, most people, will probably never need, and I really question how useful 170 remaining "useful" actually is; is the bigger part of my complaint and agreement with OPSeriously? So one pilot can fly longer range if they want to? Or tanker that delicious inexpensive fuel sometimes discovered?
I don't know why "full tanks" is magical. Fuel loadouts can and should be managed. I think anyone relying on "full fuel" leaving them some magical desired remaining payload is just being lazy.
But so does selling NFTs of dumb digital artwork for millions of dollars..
Gusts are invisible, and can happen unexpectedly. That is why when MTOGW is based on structure, the analysis assumes a gust. Just ignore that though. It'll work until it doesn't as has been mentioned several times earlier in this thread.What gust and what lack of focus? It was a hot, calm, June day. The acceleration was a bit sluggish compared to when I fly it 500lbs lighter, but that's expected. Climbout was still better than most SE GA aircraft at gross - pretty easy to the see the VSI when it's straight in front of me. There was no performance issues at cruise, no pitch , roll, or cooling issues during climb or cruise. How is standard monitoring of systems and noting the performance difference a lack of focus of flying?
Gusts are invisible, and can happen unexpectedly. That is why when MTOGW is based on structure, the analysis assumes a gust. Just ignore that though. It'll work until it doesn't as has been mentioned several times earlier in this thread.
My AG5B Tiger was ferried from the factory to the UK in 1991. I still have the ferry permit. My GW is 2400lbs and I believe the ferry pilot was close to 3500lbs. What gives me a sense of security is knowing my plane could structurally handle that much excess weight. So if I am at or near gross, I know there is margin built into the airframe. That said, I typically at 2200lbs and I am trying to learn to fly with fuel at tabs (38 gallons) rather than full at 52 gallons. Besides, my bladder (or my wife’s) dictates range more than any other factor.
When I was flying the Cirrus the rule was to keep it at tabs, gives enough flexibility that you still have a solid 3 hrs of gas in there and good load carrying. If someone is hellbent on flying a plane that negates its usefulness with full tanks because of the "what if I want to fly from Texas to Iceland in one leg? it's nice to know I can do that" thing that's fine, the solution to that is not insurmountable. It just seems ridiculous to me
But now on the flip side you have a plane that is sitting there with 90 gallons in it, all you need is 40 for this trip, and you have 2 other people with you and only 170 lbs useful. What do you do? This is not as easy as leaving a backpack in the car.
Are we thinking max gust loading is a structural issue while over gross weight?....it's certified to 9G's.
Keep your speed up ....it will stall slightly higher with less control authority.
Don't use that as an excuse to overload it, though.
Just because it can do it once doesn't mean it can do it over and over. Fatigue will become an issue at some point, and that point may be unknown.
Bend a paperclip in half, then straightern it. Looks okay, right? Can still clip papers, right? Now bend it in half and back a hundred times. You probably won't make it that far.
Also, you don't know how carefully that ferry pilot might have been flying. Gentle takeoff, slow climb out, never got close to VA, stayed in calm air, etc., and was probably well under max weight by the time he landed.
Flying UNDER weight can be scary sometimes...fly 100 lbs under on a hot hot day, for example.
Not advocating flying over gross, but it would be pretty hard to "bend that paper clip" on an airplane by flying over gross, unless you are one to perform repeated carrier landings.
if I were designing planes (can you imagine?) I'd want, or assume yes, somewhere in the 400-600 remaining left with full tanks. Options and STCs, fine, people for crazy missions that's fine. It just seems on principle peculiar to me that a plane can basically be "fueled out".. so to speak. I'm also spoiled with the Aztec currently at full tanks you can still pack 6 full grown men in thereSo what's that number? 400? 600?
Sure, it just adds an extra layer of planning. Which is fine.. but personally if I'm going to need that much gas once a year, or less, then I'd rather just be able to fill it and not worry about over grossing should I elect to fly with a few friends for that impromptu Saturday AVX lunch. Incidentally AVX does not have gas and it's over water, so you need to tanker gasDon't have it sitting at 90g
Sure, it just adds an extra layer of planning. Which is fine.. but personally if I'm going to need that much gas once a year, or less, then I'd rather just be able to fill it and not worry about over grossing should I elect to fly with a few friends for that impromptu Saturday AVX lunch. Incidentally AVX does not have gas and it's over water, so you need to tanker gas