Jaybird180
Final Approach
How much margin do you add to your take-off, landing and 50 foot obstacle clearance calculations?
There are so many variables in this equation that any answer is almost meaningless. (Surface condition and material, grade, DA, load, experience on that particular field, yada yada yada. But in reality the question really comes down to: Would you land here?
My wife is fond of saying a good attorney never asks a question they don't know the answer to. I would never land any place I wasn't sure I could get out of. (Barring emergencies of course.) But I would need a specific data set to categorically state the safety factor applied.
Warm summer day, 3k ft grass field surrounded by forest, C-172 with 4 adult passengers, gear, and gas.
Surprised they made it there in the first place, with that load.
Interesting that your answer conflicts with your signature, sir.
I currently fly an old piper, I'm fairly certain the numbers were written by the marketing department and not the engineering. I went to an airport with 10,000' density altitude and plenty of asphalt. I started with an hours worth of fuel and added stuff here and there, filled up made mental notes and measurements. (My wife was riding a 162 mile bike ride, what else was I going to do in the middle of nowhere montana) You'll get a good respect for your planes performance or lack thereof.
If my Cardinal is any guide, I wouldn't be so sure about that.OTOH I've found Cessna charts to be much more realistic.
Probably. I remember the C-206, 210 and 320's charts being wildly optimistic, especially for service ceiling. But these were 1960s airplanes when the charts were only a few pages and written by the marketing department, I think.The charts in the '67 Cherokee 180 I instruct in are an absolute joke. Same in the Debonair.
OTOH I've found Cessna charts to be much more realistic.
I'm sure it's all in my head though.
Probably. I remember the C-206, 210 and 320's charts being wildly optimistic, especially for service ceiling. But these were 1960s airplanes when the charts were only a few pages and written by the marketing department, I think.
Interesting. I've found the restart numbers pretty easy to achieve using only 1/4-1/3 on the Henning pilot skill level chart.
It seems to me I remember you having a newer airplane. I was talking about airplanes from the 1960s with very skimpy documentation.
Oh, when you wrote "restart numbers" you meant after production restarted. For whatever reason I was thinking about restarting the engine.I know, that's what I thought was interesting, Cessna has changed all that to conservative numbers. Age of litigation trumping marketing I suspect.
All the Cardinals were built before Cessna started publishing a more detailed POH. The "newer" post 1980 cessna POH's are actually pretty useful.If my Cardinal is any guide, I wouldn't be so sure about that.
Then again, I really DO need to clean those bugs off the wings.
If I have to worry about it at all I usually don't go.
If I have to worry about it at all I usually don't go.