SixPapaCharlie
May the force be with you
- Joined
- Aug 8, 2013
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Sixer
I posted in the N. Tx Flying friends FB group asking if anyone had a Grumman Tiger and wanted to talk to me about their plane.
A man chimed in and said sure, come on out.
I flew to his house and he went over every inch of the plane with me w/ a fine tooth comb.
He says Hop in and off we go. Turns out the guy is also a CFI so we went up and put the plane through a checkride. 1/2 way through, he pops open the canopy and we did the remainder of the flight with it open. That is a really awesome feature.
The plane was quicker than I expected.
It feels very solid.
Stalls were absolutely benign to the point of being boring.
Not as responsive as the Cirrus but much more so than a 172
It was smaller than I expected but not uncomfortably small.
We were somewhat shoulder to shoulder but neither of us were FAA standard size humans.
The two biggest complaints I have heard were non issues
* It seemed to have plenty of climbing ability.
* It is dead simple to enter and exit.
PLENTY of legroom in the back seats.
Storage capabilities are awesome, Back seats come out and you could fit a smart car in the back.
He let me land it twice and I think because I have been in the Cirrus, it wasn't much different.
He warned me that the sight picture is pretty low and the castering nose wheel can be different from most planes. Both true in the Cirrus
This flight confirms it remains at the top of my list.
One thing I will do though is add to my check list "DUCK!"
He closed the hatch and got me pretty good in the back of the head because I was leaning to the right looking at something. Ouch!
All in all, it is fast enough, carries enough weight, fits a variety of missions, low to normal fuel burn. No blue knobs or retract gear to mess with.
hmmmm. He never showed me how to operate the chute though.
2004 Grumman Tiger
Short clips of the interior
Exterior:
A man chimed in and said sure, come on out.
I flew to his house and he went over every inch of the plane with me w/ a fine tooth comb.
He says Hop in and off we go. Turns out the guy is also a CFI so we went up and put the plane through a checkride. 1/2 way through, he pops open the canopy and we did the remainder of the flight with it open. That is a really awesome feature.
The plane was quicker than I expected.
It feels very solid.
Stalls were absolutely benign to the point of being boring.
Not as responsive as the Cirrus but much more so than a 172
It was smaller than I expected but not uncomfortably small.
We were somewhat shoulder to shoulder but neither of us were FAA standard size humans.
The two biggest complaints I have heard were non issues
* It seemed to have plenty of climbing ability.
* It is dead simple to enter and exit.
PLENTY of legroom in the back seats.
Storage capabilities are awesome, Back seats come out and you could fit a smart car in the back.
He let me land it twice and I think because I have been in the Cirrus, it wasn't much different.
He warned me that the sight picture is pretty low and the castering nose wheel can be different from most planes. Both true in the Cirrus
This flight confirms it remains at the top of my list.
One thing I will do though is add to my check list "DUCK!"
He closed the hatch and got me pretty good in the back of the head because I was leaning to the right looking at something. Ouch!
All in all, it is fast enough, carries enough weight, fits a variety of missions, low to normal fuel burn. No blue knobs or retract gear to mess with.
hmmmm. He never showed me how to operate the chute though.
2004 Grumman Tiger
Short clips of the interior
Exterior: