Sweet plane.
I wonder why they made the canopy flip up instead of a slider?
Yeah, I guess looking at it more closely, the canopy is longer than the turtle deck. Thus the flip up canopy.Good question but not sure where it would slide. We had a couple of those babies at a fly- in a couple years ago. Dreamy planes! Kind like a new Ferrari or Lambo.
Pardon my ignorance, but what is that? Judging by the prop I'm betting it's got just a little bit of power!
it is a Turbine Legend.
No, it is a Turbine Legend. Not a Lancair.
They would be much more attractive if pressurized. Look great, but fuel burn is over 40 gph for 250 kts.
http://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Legend_Legend
No, it is a Turbine Legend. Not a Lancair.
They would be much more attractive if pressurized. Look great, but fuel burn is over 40 gph for 250 kts.
http://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Legend_Legend
Smokin' hot!
The Lancair guys refer to the turbine version by the designation Lancair IVPT. Not to berate the Legend, but I would take one of these any day over the Legend. Very nice plane.Here's a Lancair IVP (pressurized) that my brother built:
I am guessing it has about 2 and 15 minutes hours total flying time with no reserves....100 gallons of fuel is pretty limiting...even at 275ktas.
I wonder what the fuel flow is?
I am friends with the owner, just got back from a weekend at the Reno air races with him and 12 other buddies. He had the plane in Florida for an engine overhaul and is coming home. Amazing performance.
I get a ride in that bad boy when he gets back!
Sweet plane.
I wonder why they made the canopy flip up instead of a slider?
100 gallons of fuel is pretty limiting...even at 275ktas.
I wonder what the fuel flow is?
Yeah, I guess looking at it more closely, the canopy is longer than the turtle deck. Thus the flip up canopy.
Which begs the new question: Why not flip forward, so that it's not catastrophic when it pops open in flight?
Well, there's that, I suppose.Probably so you can eject if you need to?
Probably so you can eject if you need to?
Agree that the IV-P is more practical/useful. I'd love to have one, but judging by the NTSB reports, they are death traps.... How does a non-career pilot learn to fly one safely (if that's even possible...)
Agree that the IV-P is more practical/useful. I'd love to have one, but judging by the NTSB reports, they are death traps.... How does a non-career pilot learn to fly one safely (if that's even possible...)
Very carefully, with a good instructor. I know someone who has one, and a Pitts S1. The IVPT is a sweet ride, I love the sound of the 4-blade prop in beta thrust. It is really fast all the way to the pavement!
He just rolled his SUV on the interstate and passed away a week ago.
Where is he from? Definitely not a native Nebraska boy. Or was the person flying it yesterday not the owner? Young, lean guy with a "non-american" accent.
Lancair has a group of pilots which are factory approved for transition training:Agree that the IV-P is more practical/useful. I'd love to have one, but judging by the NTSB reports, they are death traps.... How does a non-career pilot learn to fly one safely (if that's even possible...)
By the way, Lancair does have its version of the Turbine Legend. It is called the Sentry:
http://www.pilotfriend.com/experimental/acft4/30.htm
No, not pressurized and I believe there are only 2.Wow, that looks nice. 1125 sm range w/ 125 gal tank is not bad on gas either. Is it pressurized? How many exist?