Zeldman
Touchdown! Greaser!
True enough - wasn't there a scumbag financial planner that bailed out of a Malibu trying to fake his death ?
Is this the one you are thinking of.??
http://abcnews.go.com/US/story?id=6630842&page=1
True enough - wasn't there a scumbag financial planner that bailed out of a Malibu trying to fake his death ?
I'm about 6'0, a 38-40 jacket. I've always found the front seat to not go back far enough for me to be comfortable. My knees end up uncomfortably straddling the yoke. But they're nice flying airplanes. Something I'd certainly consider if I get to that point financially.
He's little optimistic on speed. I get about 200 on 13 to 14 gals. I plan for 17 gal and come out close with my climb. Takes me about 40 min depending on temps to climb to 25000 burning about 23 gal. That is with a 550. I am 5-11 and 235 and I fit just fine. I think it handles like a warrior at low speeds. Wish wings were 3 ft shorter for hanger situation but, I think about perfect plane for me. My useful load is 1408.1 lbs. I can hold about 700 lbs of fuel. When I flew to Florida in dec my true was between 265 and 280 with nice tailwind. It's all in flightaware. Did my annual recert in feb and when we did engine out from 7500 at best glide of 90 which made my spiral decent rate 380fpm took about 20 min to get down to pattern alt. Coulda ate lunch. I commonly do full power decents which puts me close to vne of 203 and true in middle 250s till lower. I usually start descending around 90 out or so depending on alt. By the way I have pictures showing speed and fuel burn for the naysayers. But doesn't have a chute I guess.
I flew right seat in one a couple of years ago.
There was no position I could bend my body into that was comfortable in that plane.
The cockpit was made for people who are all torso, no legs and very narrow.
Just my opinion.
True enough - wasn't there a scumbag financial planner that bailed out of a Malibu trying to fake his death ?
Is your engine set up to make boost down low or just compensate for altitude? What is your HP rating? What manifold pressure and prop rpm do you use for climb (initial anyway)?He's little optimistic on speed. I get about 200 on 13 to 14 gals. I plan for 17 gal and come out close with my climb. Takes me about 40 min depending on temps to climb to 25000 burning about 23 gal. That is with a 550. I am 5-11 and 235 and I fit just fine. I think it handles like a warrior at low speeds. Wish wings were 3 ft shorter for hanger situation but, I think about perfect plane for me. My useful load is 1408.1 lbs. I can hold about 700 lbs of fuel. When I flew to Florida in dec my true was between 265 and 280 with nice tailwind. It's all in flightaware. Did my annual recert in feb and when we did engine out from 7500 at best glide of 90 which made my spiral decent rate 380fpm took about 20 min to get down to pattern alt. Coulda ate lunch. I commonly do full power decents which puts me close to vne of 203 and true in middle 250s till lower. I usually start descending around 90 out or so depending on alt. By the way I have pictures showing speed and fuel burn for the naysayers. But doesn't have a chute I guess.
The Mooney Ovation and the Columbia 400 are in the same ballpark though not 6 seats or pressurized.I know this is a malibu thread but are there other single engine piston powered AC that will go this fast? I Imagine the SR22 would be up there.
The Mooney Ovation and the Columbia 400 are in the same ballpark though not 6 seats or pressurized.
I know this is a malibu thread but are there other single engine piston powered AC that will go this fast? I Imagine the SR22 would be up there.
I know this is a malibu thread but are there other single engine piston powered AC that will go this fast? I Imagine the SR22 would be up there.
Almost threw upI like how he put his 60 year old wife in a tube top to pose on the wing. I mean, if that doesn't get this thing sold, nothing will.
Evolution will do 240ktsI know this is a malibu thread but are there other single engine piston powered AC that will go this fast? I Imagine the SR22 would be up there.
True enough - wasn't there a scumbag financial planner that bailed out of a Malibu trying to fake his death ?
Homebuilts- Lancair EVO, Lancair IVP, Glasair III, Questair, White Lightning, Velocity TXL, Berkut, SX-300, E racer.
Production- Mooney Acclaim, SR22T (close), Cessna 400T.
This post is a rabbit hole of Google.
Wasn't familiar with the Questair until recently, that plane is incredible. 240 knots!!! That's what I thought every plane would be doing by now when I was younger.
The White Lightning, what's not to like? Fast, efficient, seats 4. One of youse guys should revive that kit, make a quickbuild, sell a bunch of them, then maybe I could afford to buy one in 15-20 years.
Berkut, that's a neat looking airplane, looks like a single-seater (or maybe a passenger can sit behind):
...and the SX-300. I guess the dude who did the white lightning heaped praise on Ed Swearingen, the creator of the SX-300, and got advice from him. Sounds like a more difficult airplane to fly.
Thanks, interesting airplanes! I want the white lightning.
2 more seats make a difference, So I'd assume they get some business.
I think you mean ground speed but yes they are nice airplanes. I'm a bit too tall (6'6") to be comfortable in a PA46 but if I wasn't I'd be very tempted by a Meridian.
As you have pointed out, the glide ratio of these planes is impressive!
I'm about 6'0, a 38-40 jacket. I've always found the front seat to not go back far enough for me to be comfortable. My knees end up uncomfortably straddling the yoke. But they're nice flying airplanes. Something I'd certainly consider if I get to that point financially.
how tight?
I just looked at the POH and it has a Vne of 203kts....interesting, maybe he put 225kts as a typo,
Most GA aircraft aren't asking the engine to do as much.
I flew right seat in one a couple of years ago.
There was no position I could bend my body into that was comfortable in that plane.
The cockpit was made for people who are all torso, no legs and very narrow.
Just my opinion.
I've actually flown a White Lightning with the company CEO back when they were still producing kits. We were doing an honest 215 kt average speed. All on only 210 hp. Used to have some world records back in the day for its class. Just another kit that never caught on. Rearward facing seats in the back probably wasn't the best idea.
http://www.studiomoonart.com/whitelightning.htm
They also produced a kit called a Lightning Bug. Little single seat aircraft with a 100 hp engine that went about 200 kts.
The Velocity and White Lightning really had an impact on me when I was in college. I clearly remember drooling over both in Kit Planes way back in the days before I could even afford my pilots license (hell, I could afford the magazine and read it cover to cover in the Student Union convenience store). When I do my regular airplane porn craw through Barnstormers, I still check the White Lightning link every time ... appears some LSA like plane uses the same name. Those two, the Midget Mustang, the Defiant and the Breezy and Pietenpol have always had my heart. I've owned a Velocity and it was every bit as amazing as I always thought it would be. Next on the list is either a Pietenpol or a Breezy. This is a great thread.
I don't think the Malibu and Mirage engines work that hard. The airframe is very slick, so the Malibu is going to be running 70-75% with its 310 HP engine in cruise, and the Mirage only 65-75% of its 350 HP engine. Depending on the year and engine type, those engines are quite happy. Felt very comfortable behind the Lycoming, just purrs up there in the rare air. They are also excellent gliders, so if the engine ever were to quit in cruise, first pick what state you want to land in, and then pick an airport that has the best combination of food entertainment and service. Heck, you have 37 minutes to figure all that from FL250, so might as well knock out another chapter in that book you were reading on autopilot.
They can go fast, although 225 would be running that engine really hard WOT ROP. Here is at max cruise and 24,000 feet in a 2011 Mirage. Don't want to run max cruise for engine longevity, but makes for a nice screen shot. Typically I would expect 200 KTAS above 18,000 feet and expect around 205-210 in the twenties with a well running engine and a well tuned air-frame.
View attachment 52040
What about having just one piston engine providing pressurization? Does that cause the engine to work harder than on other aircraft?I don't think the Malibu and Mirage engines work that hard.
What about having just one piston engine providing pressurization? Does that cause the engine to work harder than on other aircraft?
Not really. The pressurization comes off the excess bleed from 2 large turbos. Those turbos are just powered by the exhaust from that big engine. That exhaust is departing the engine whether you capture that energy or not. There is obviously some slight degree of back pressure that a turbo puts on the engine, but I would think it has minimal effect.
Its not the seats. It's the pressurised hull that is the attraction for Cirrus owners to move up. O2 masks are a PITA and to get the most out of an SR22T you want to be up high - 20k+ ASL. Most of the wives and kids hate the masks.
My wife and kids will barely wear a nice ANR headset. Cannulas. Lolthat makes more sense.
I can't see my kid wanting to wear one.
I just stick the tube in my mouth. No mask, nothing in my nose. No problem talking on mic.
I can see that being uncomfortable.The worst part about cannulae is the drying effect of the O2 on the nasal mucosa after a few hours.
Plus you can do a killer rendition of "Do You Feel Like We Do?"I just stick the tube in my mouth. No mask, nothing in my nose. No problem talking on mic.