Kenny Phillips
Final Approach
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Kenny Phillips
It will cost less than a Cirrus SR22, gonna guess.A DA62 is $1.4mil. Do you really think the DA50 is going to cost more than a DA62?
It will cost less than a Cirrus SR22, gonna guess.A DA62 is $1.4mil. Do you really think the DA50 is going to cost more than a DA62?
They make Citations, they just don't care much about the pistons. I paid as much for my house as a new 172.Watching the TTx go was hard. Difficult to envision Textron pistons a decade from now without some new designs and better marketing.
It will cost less than a Cirrus SR22, gonna guess.
Yes, the G3 and beyond (I believe) are 90+ gallons. The G5 SR22T and G3 SR22TN I was flying had the bigger tanks
Thanks Foreflight! The early stuff when I imported via the template into Foreflight is missing.. but the last 500 hours or so have distances
Yes. The typical "longer" flight for me is KMYF-KTVL (San Diego - Lake Tahoe).. nonstop. It takes about 2hrs to 2hrs 30 minutes, depending on winds. Sure as hell beats driving the 9+ hrs and also beats flying an airliner up there. KMYF-KMMH (San Diego - Mammoth) is also up there, but that's a 1.5-2 hr flight and relatively "close".. again, way better than the drive. KMYF-KTEX (San Diego to Telluride) is the furthest one. Incidentally, on that list I just gave you, only the Telluride flight is over 500nm
The SR22 is a capable plane, especially when combined with turbo and FIKI.. but past 700nm the benefit of GA travel vs the airlines starts to fade.. weather planning, comfort, and at some point door to door time. I honestly think 200-700nm is the GA sweet spot, with the majority of that in the 300-400 nm legs.. where driving sucks, and flying commercial is a big time headache
True, and by ga I mean the typical person in a bonanza, Cirrus, etcSo if I can pull it off, even if the numbers don’t line up, I’d prefer to avoid the commercial human traffic
just got my response back from Diamond. Estimated U.S. pricing is 850K base.
While that's true for the most part, there's a few places without Jet-A where I could imagine the well-heeled would still like to visit (KFFA, Catalina, Death Valley, parts of Alaska, your vacation retreat in the hills, etc)....the need to tanker fuel back and forth. However I bet for the demographic this plane is geared towards that's a virtually non existent problem.
Can someone enlighten me as to who the target demographic is? Who spends $850k when a quarter of that will get you a very nice second hand airplane, with similar performance and updated avionics? RV-10 anyone? Just curious.just got my response back from Diamond. Estimated U.S. pricing is 850K base.
Well there's no fuel there in general.. but it's like 20 miles from shore, so you don't need to tanker that much. I'd run MYF-AVX at tabs, which was plentyCatalina
Yeah, they have no fuel either in general. That takes some planning.. when I did that run I had W&B too to worry aboutDeath Valley
Can someone enlighten me as to who the target demographic is? Who spends $850k when a quarter of that will get you a very nice second hand airplane, with similar performance and updated avionics?.
Same people buying Cirrus.. or anyone who doesn't want to spend ludicrous amounts of money to fly a 40 year old hodgepodge mess that at any given time has a dozen eccentricities and squawksCan someone enlighten me as to who the target demographic is?
I guess I’m just not familiar with how the other half live. More power to them.Same demographic who buys a brand new SR22 loaded up with all the features.
It's actually kind of fun, lol. The last guy I told who had an issue with Cirrus told me he flew one for fifteen minutes and his hand hurt for a week. I told him you have to trim an airplane when you fly it.
Same people buying Cirrus.. or anyone who doesn't want to spend ludicrous amounts of money to fly a 40 year old hodgepodge mess that at any given time has a dozen eccentricities and squawks
We wonder why GA is dying.. there's money out there but people don't want to drop six figures onto a multi decades old plane. It's honestly pitiful
How expensive things are for what you get, compared to the rest of 2020.. performance wise there are some great buys out there, especially for Mooney, namely Jwhat is pitiful???
How expensive things are for what you get, compared to the rest of 2020.. performance wise there are some great buys out there, especially for Mooney, namely J
But try and show a dude and his wife who are used to their 2020 GMC Yukon, iPhone X's, Tesla, what $85K of their hard earned money gets them, compared to the standard they're used to.. they'll take a hard pass
Fingers crossed for the EA world.. I feel like I keep hearing about and seeing more RVs out thereAh, I see.. yea aviation is really expensive.. Far overpriced...this is the fault of the FAA.. they should drop the barriers to entry for all GA, let the buyers choose...
It’s ridiculous the cost of production due to over regulation
But try and show a dude and his wife who are used to their 2020 GMC Yukon, iPhone X's, Tesla, what $85K of their hard earned money gets them, compared to the standard they're used to.. they'll take a hard pass
True, and by ga I mean the typical person in a bonanza, Cirrus, etc
With a TBM you can pretty much fly anywhere in the country..
I agree, flying commercial is a downright miserable experience
Most of my family is in Boston and Florida.. flying a piston single those distances from San Diego is a whole "to do"
But 300 knots or greater at 30,000 ft at TBM turns it into a viable option. and unless you can snag a direct ticket I'm willing to bet the door-to-door times are similar or even favor the TBM
Wow... that looks awesomevideo released yesterday
Man is it HEAVY. Love the look and someone using the CD-300 in a certified...but left wanting more. 44' wingspan sucks. But then again, a dude with 850k probably isn't in a standard t hangar. The weight is also less than ideal, but that probably comes from being composite. Love the stuff, but it makes an aircraft heavy compared to aluminum. Like an RV-10 vs a Cirrus. Max takeoff weight is 4400 but only 1232 useful. The shear mass probably cuts into some of that useful. Like we've seen, the retractable doesn't always give you a ton of extra speed. I'd rather save the insurance money and take the useful load for the extra few knots. Calling it a 5 place is like calling a Six a 7 place. It's a VERY roomy 4 place.
Well, it's going to take more $$$ to push more weight, and it would effect short field and climb performance, but as you say, if those specs meet with your needs, being heavy can be a good thing in a lot of ways.Why does it matter if it's heavy? If you're flying a PA-24 or a DA50 and they both have around 1,200 lbs of useful load, does it matter that it's 2,000 lbs empty or 3,000 lbs empty? Obviously that's where the need for longer wings comes in on the DA50, but as long as I'm not exceeding some legal weight (like 12,500) does it matter what the max weight is? Honest question.
I think the fact that he is 6' 6" makes it look a little tighter than it really is.Looks like almost sitting on the floor with knees way up.
Heavy might be good, but if they sell a bunch of them, I'm going to buy stock in a company that builds tugs.Heavy is good, means a better ride in turbulence, but that might be offset with that big wing
Low aspect ratio should be ok.Heavy is good, means a better ride in turbulence, but that might be offset with that big wing
Why does it matter if it's heavy? If you're flying a PA-24 or a DA50 and they both have around 1,200 lbs of useful load, does it matter that it's 2,000 lbs empty or 3,000 lbs empty? Obviously that's where the need for longer wings comes in on the DA50, but as long as I'm not exceeding some legal weight (like 12,500) does it matter what the max weight is? Honest question.