Fearless Tower
Touchdown! Greaser!
Don't see these everyday....
Beech Starship parked at Gibbs (MYF) this week.
Beech Starship parked at Gibbs (MYF) this week.
Well shoot John. Now you've got me wondering what you said.I decided against this post and deleted it.
-John
I've seen a few in KASE.
I may be wrong, but I seem to recall that a few years ago Beech offered to buy back all of the Starships that were still flying. If that's true, I'm suprised that there are any flying at all.
I may be wrong, but I seem to recall that a few years ago Beech offered to buy back all of the Starships that were still flying. If that's true, I'm suprised that there are any flying at all.
Yep. And when I was in Arizona, I think it was 5 summers ago I found 6 or 7 sitting on the ramp at an airport in Tucson minus engines.
John
There is one based in ASE.
Correct.There was a story on one of the 60 minutes type shows a few years back about one owner who refused to let beech get his plane. He apparently bought all the parts, planes and pieces he could get his hands on in order to keep his flying. Maybe the planes are Marana are his?
SNIP
Frank
Not quite. They had a lot of problems with certification, many of which had to do with the composite construction, but that wasn't their only delay in manufacturing/certification. Not by a long shot! That said, it was (is) a fully certified aircraft.I was under the impression the reason Beech killed it was a certification issue. I had heard the composites were hanging up the FAA and they wouldn't grant it normal category so it was doomed in the experimental category.
That's how I heard it.
Starship Diaries said:The first full-size Starship made its maiden flight on February 15th, 1986. The second joined the test flight program in June 1986, and the third was ready for flight in the early spring of 1987. In the course of a two-year flight test program, they flew almost 2,000 hours, and on June 14th the Starship received FAA certification. The first production Starship, NC-4, went on flight test late 1988.
In construction materials, perhaps yes. In many other ways...depends who you ask.Piaggio seemed to get it right.
Thanks! I wish I had my real camera with me; those were just cell phone pictures.Great pics Teller... Thanks..
I nominate you to be the POA roving reporter..
It is sad to see historic airframes sitting there rotting in the desert sun.
Thanks!Teller,
That's the place. You got better pictures than I did, I stopped on the road outside and took a couple through the fence over the objections of my wife & kids.
John
Here's the one that spends some of its time in Aspen.
Here's the one that spends some of its time in Aspen.
Here's the one that spends some of its time in Aspen.
That's Bob Scherer's plane. http://www.bobscherer.com/Pages/Starship.htm He often flies chase for tests at Scaled.
Burt flew to Oshkosh in it last year.
Only 5 still flying.