I find myself amazed that so few planes had two real doors. On the 310 that'd be a nice asset.
Don't try to kick the windshield out of a Bonanza, there's a buttload of screws holding it in, you'll probably hurt your foot.
I agree that I like the Aerostar door the best for a single door. 402s and Chieftains with the crew door also are nice. I never understood why convention was for co-pilot side to have the single door. I'd also gladly pay the weight penalty for "door number two" - it just seems silly to not have.
It is one of the only planes where you CANNOT open the door with the engine running though.........
Well, you can probably do it just once.............
I never understood why convention was for co-pilot side to have the single door.
I like the back door on the C205. NOT.
You can open it with the flaps down (which should be the case on an emergency landing) only if you do it JUST right.
How do you crash in 25 knot winds 50 degrees off the runway?
So, it took 2.5 minutes after the incident before tower saw moving trucks, and the pilot took 45 seconds before his PAN PAN after the incident.
Actually I would disagree with that. Crosswind practice is important, but practicing in dangerously high crosswinds is too much like practicing bleeding as far as I'm concerned. Winds like that (G35KT) are unpredictable and the direction is often variable. You can be putting in all the right inputs, then the wind changes and even if your reaction is timely and spot-on accurate, the plane takes time to respond and in that time, you might be off the runway. Nearly happened to me once because of a thunderstorm gust front, 21008KT on rwy 27 shearing to 330 somethingG25KT in the blink of an eye.
I agree though, that if you're going to do it, do it with a GOOD instructor. If nothing else, the FAA will probably go harder on him than on you if you prang the plane.
Anyone got pics of the aftermath ??????
I still can't see pranging a Arrow bad enough to bend the wing so far as to prevent the door from opening.......
Anyone got pics of the aftermath ??????
I still can't see pranging a Arrow bad enough to bend the wing so far as to prevent the door from opening.......
If you ever dig into the PA-28 structure you'll find the wing much stouter than the fuselage...if the wing bends the cabin will be broken.
If you ever want to go buzz around sometime send me a message and I'll let you know when I'm up there. We'll go play in the wind on some icy runways.
Yup.... I owned N4341X for 10 years and did an owner assisted annual on it every time.......
I like the back door on the C205. NOT.
You can open it with the flaps down (which should be the case on an emergency landing) only if you do it JUST right.
What do you mean? The 205 has two doors up front like a 172/182 and a single baggage door that can be used as a PAX door for kids. As far as I know there is no flaps/baggage door interference issue.
Then maybe you know that the spar box carry-through won't bend but the fore- and aft- wing attachment points look like 16 gauge formed aluminum that ruptures at the smallest flex...
No, it doesn't. One door up front on the left like a 172/182, one big one with double doors in the rear on the right. The double doors interfere with the flaps (and each other) when they are down unless you open them just right.
I think you're talking about a 210. Different beast.
I was more worried about corrosion around the main attach point of the front spar..... looked DAMN beefy to me..........
I still would like to see pics of the wreckage...
No, it doesn't. One door up front on the left like a 172/182, one big one with double doors in the rear on the right. The double doors interfere with the flaps (and each other) when they are down unless you open them just right.
I think you're talking about a 210. Different beast.
The wing side is beefy, the cabin side not so much. The 'kota had a crack on the front attachment point. Fortunately for me the crack was found on the pre-buy and the previous owner got to pay for repairs. The repair was a complete R/R of the the attachment rib. I got to see everything after the disassembly for repair.
I agree, pictures would be educational. I'm pretty sure I can kick a PA-28 door open after releasing the latches.
What do you mean? The 205 has two doors up front like a 172/182 and a single baggage door that can be used as a PAX door for kids. As far as I know there is no flaps/baggage door interference issue.
I find myself amazed that so few planes had two real doors. On the 310 that'd be a nice asset.
Did they do U and P versions of the 205 like they did the 206 with different door configurations?
Nope. All the 205s are actually on the 210 TCDS, their real name is 210-5 built from 1963 to 1964.
The 206 is on a different TCDS even tho the early years still had a hump on the nose bowl and I believe a few early early 206 also have two doors on the front.
He's probably thinking about the 206. The P-206 has 2 front doors, the U-206 has the big double back doors on the right. That was a nice thing with the BN-Islander, no shortage of doors.
Re: the 206 can have two front doors and rear barn doors for the ultimate in egress options. The front passenger door is an STC from Wipaire.
I really like the 205. The IO470 and that airframe seem like a pretty good match. I really like the door arrangement too. I wish my cowling came off that easy.
Can you see two doors up front? The pilot's door is open and so is the window. This is a 205. There is only 1 door on the right and its the Copilot door same size as the left pilot door.
It's a very busy delta. At least at onetime, it was the busiest GA runway in the country. The city's fire department is based and has a station on airport property. Three minutes seems like a reasonable response time for having no warning. But I don't know what their target is.This is surprising to you? It's a delta. I doubt they have a 24/7 ARFF crew sitting in the station all day waiting for the once per decade bad crash. Most deltas like this have equipment, but no dedicated crew. Airport operations staff are cross trained. They have to drop whatever they're doing, drive over to the station, get dressed, and jump in the truck. 2:45 to be rolling is pretty good!
I'm pretty sure dealing with himself and his child come before radioing in what everyone already knows to begin with.
It's a very busy delta. At least at onetime, it was the busiest GA runway in the country. The city's fire department is based and has a station on airport property. Three minutes seems like a reasonable response time for having no warning. But I don't know what their target is.