No. Hundreds of the Bonanza accidents involved breakup of the airplane inflight.
I haven't been following closely, but the Cirrus stays together better.
This horse has been thoroughly flogged to death, not sure another thread will contribute much.
I ask, because I am becoming a new Cirrus driver, and I am loving this plane! (I also love Bonanza's, too.)
P.S. The 709 guy actually complained that "the airplane didn't tell him" he was running out of gas in a monster westbound headwind. I forgot that part. Unbelievable.
I ask, because I am becoming a new Cirrus driver, and I am loving this plane! (I also love Bonanza's, too.)
People have flown worse planes better and better planes worse. No crate makes up for poor ADM. If you have good ADM, no certified crate should fail you.
there is nothing as bad as a bonanza......
It was a cheap shot.
Ben:
Based upon your approach to flying, the Cirrus is a very safe airplane.
In fact, there are a great many design features of the Cirrus which are exceptional (and, perhaps, a few which are not), but it still takes a pilot to kill an airplane and, from time to time, himself and his passengers.
Ben, the Cirrus is a solid aircraft, just use normal sense operating it and you will be fine.
people take cheap shots all day long on here about cirrus and nothing is ever said, personally i would never fly in a v tail bonanza, but that is just me
The recent AOPA article about both a Cirrus and a Bonanza plowing into a Convective SIGMET was enlightening.
Controller asked the Cirrus guy how his ride through the thunderstorm line was and he incorrectly said he picked his way through with "radar", which was actually delayed XM weather data.
Bonanza A36TC right behind him came out of the bottom of the clouds in pieces scattered over 15 miles.
The Cirrus driver probably has no idea how close he came to death that day. The Bonanza driver had already totaled one aircraft in turbulence, and managed to land it all wrinkled up, prior to his fatal second attempt at stupidity.
people take cheap shots all day long on here about cirrus and nothing is ever said, personally i would never fly in a v tail bonanza, but that is just me
I think Spike flies a straight-tail, but I'm not sure.
Here's one more thing there, we don't know that the Cirrus is undamaged and there is no real way to inspect it to make sure. There are no guarantees that just because the structure came out the other side intact that there was not an occurrence that set up some micro fractures in the matrix, and they will grow and eventually be the location of a explosive failure.
IME it's incorrect to say that there are no fatigue issue with composites, they are just different types of fatigue.
This is a very good point. I had a similar experience with a golf club of all things the other day. There must have been a hairline crack that developed in this driver that was basically invisible, and one shot sounded kinda funny, and I looked at the head and it was completely busted. Cracked all around. Just goes to show that there's plenty dangerous that you can't see...
Call me crazy but I will fly in.....
a Cirrus
a straight tail Bo
a v tail Bo
or any other airworthy certificated airplane.
I'll also fly in most any airworthy experimental.
My instructor said just about the same thing before he died in a v tail. We were having the exact same debate about a week before when i told him I would not ride in it. Personally I think instructors get used to flying in junk (most rentals) and it clouds their judgement.
My instructor said just about the same thing before he died in a v tail. We were having the exact same debate about a week before when i told him I would not ride in it. Personally I think instructors get used to flying in junk (most rentals) and it clouds their judgement.
Ben:
Based upon your approach to flying, the Cirrus is a very safe airplane.
Call me crazy but I will fly in.....
a Cirrus
a straight tail Bo
a v tail Bo
or any other airworthy certificated airplane.
I'll also fly in most any airworthy experimental.
Ditto Jesse.
But...I will fly none of the above into a thunderstorm. It really is simple.
My instructor said just about the same thing before he died in a v tail. We were having the exact same debate about a week before when i told him I would not ride in it. Personally I think instructors get used to flying in junk (most rentals) and it clouds their judgement.
If you're not an idiot, have a healthy respect for weather, and realize the limitations of your aircraft (which, in a Cirrus, are many), then you should be fine.
What limitations are you talking about?
What limitations are you talking about?
I suspect that had a lot more to do with how the plane was maintained or with the pilot than with the fact it was a Bonanza.