Skylane81E
Final Approach
I view a turbo about the same way I view a twin, they exist for a reason, but unless you need what they are providing its money I would rather spend elsewhere
I remember you telling me about that. Any idea what the exhaust components cost?
5 minute? So dramatic. Was the mechanic Cuban by any chance?
Huh... Those look pretty cool. How does it work in terms of routing the oxygen tube? (O2 in the Mooney is above your head in the center of the plane). Is it a permanent mod to the headset?
Don't get me wrong, I'd love to have a turbo. I've had the Ovation up to 16K several times, and when there's weather I wish I had better climb performance in the mid-teens. I can average better than 1000fpm to 10K but up at 16K I'm at 400fpm or less. And for the longer trips that I do, and topping weather, the turbo would be great. However, there's still no point to it on short trips. Even with a turbo on a long-body Mooney it's going to take you 8nm per 1000 feet to climb and descend. Going to 20,000 feet where the turbo will really shine will take 160nm just for the climb and descent (in fact, likely more). Just not worth it for a 200nm trip where you'll be spending only 10 minutes in cruise if you did that.
Again, though, you'd better be going somewhere.
And on the headwind days...
Definitely... But in the Ovation I can climb to 16K and cross Lake Michigan up north within glide range of shore at all times without a turbo too. (Ahhh, excess horsepower. )
Believe me, I lust after turbos - But for many pilots, they don't make sense. If frequent long-distance travel is your mission, then they do. I'm kind of in the middle - I do about 5-10 long trips per year. I must admit, a turbo would have been really nice on a couple of them in the past year, but not having it didn't keep me from completing the mission either.
In some ways, the birds with lots of extra horsepower instead of a turbo are better - You get to go pretty fast on *all* your trips, still maintain a good time-to-climb up to 15K or so, and don't have to maintain a turbo. It's the really long-distance stuff where the turbo really shines.
So... In all, Alex, I agree with you on why turbos are good - I just think that a lot of newer pilots don't recognize their limitations.
They work with old and new Bose. You have to trim about a 1/16" from one of the plastic pieces to clear the sheet metal bracket that holds the boom. It gets sandwiched in there and screwed down with the factory screws. So not a permanent mod.
The O2 tube comes off the boom at the ear piece. In my bird it goes down across my lap and up to the overhead console.
Passengers like it because nothing touches you and it's just like a second mike. Nothing in your nose or against your face. Female passengers seem to really worry about landing with a mask outline. I still check them with an oximeter, but so far no problems.
The beauty of a turbo vs. say a turbine is that you don't have to climb, but you can anytime you want.
I'll probably further my rep as an elitist a-hole, but IMO every piston used for travel should have ~300HP AND a turbo. I wish they made engines with more. Performance can increase safety in many scenarios IMO.
BTW an Ovation is one of the best performing NA singles so it does blur the line a little to begin with.
I'm not going to tag you as elitist, a true long haul traveling single to me is a 210, Bonanza or mooney, a mooney can get away with a bit less engine because there is less plane to drag around. It is why I have a 182, fits nicely between the real traveling airplanes and the Sunday flyers
I've been looking at listings online for a Piper Arrow III or IV and I'm torn between getting a regular to turbocharged version. It seems like there are a lot more turbocharged Arrows for sale vs the regular. I know that the turbo engines would be more expensive to maintain but that's pretty nonspecific. How do the turbos compare to the regular engines in their ability to make TBO and maintenance costs? A lot of the listing online are aircraft that have Merlyn wastegates or intercoolers or both installed. How much would accessories like those improve engine temperatures and reliability?
I'm not real surprised that find myself in disagreement with most.
I think of a turbo as an option on many airframes that cost a little more when new ~5-7%, a little in maintenance, and maybe 30 lbs useful. For that price it effectively doubles the flight envelope. Who wouldn't want that?
I use the Rocket Engineering oxygen boom's. passengers love them as do I. Makes O2 a non-issue.
Leave somewhere like North Las Vegas on a summer afternoon with a ramp temp of about 130. Push all the knobs forward climb at 8-900 FPM to 17k not touching the engine. Cruise home in smooth cold air. What could be easier?
Top a winter storm system full of misery at 20k and ride in perfect conditions on top, it never gets old.
10-20k is no man's land and a great way to avoid a lot of traffic and unfavorable routings.
Any flying in the summer southwest thermals and I want to be at 16 minimum.
On the tail wind days climb up and get a real push (often 30-50 knots).
Climb through weather with 100% of rated power. This can mean a lot at certain times.
Climb high and increase glide range, 20k over a swamp, cold water, etc. is a lot more comfortable than 2k.
Mountains of course.
The real issue is many pilots have a mental service ceiling of 10k. In that case, I agree a turbo offers nothing.
I view a turbo about the same way I view a twin, they exist for a reason, but unless you need what they are providing its money I would rather spend elsewhere
Depends on your mission and budget. I have a NA Arrow IV, nicely equipped and meets my missions of 3-4 hour trips. Anything longer is a Commercial ride unless I have time to spare.
I would rather run a 20 kilo race than get in an un-air conditioned airplane on a 130 d F tarmac, ditto flying 20,000' unpressurized.
It is fun to have one on the ramp at Comanche fly ins (only 29 out of 5500 ever made Turbos).
Maybe its just my experience with what are probably crooked beat up flight school arrows...but why an arrow when maybe there is a 206 or 210 out there. I cannot stand flying the PA28R-200. Feels underpowered, heavy, ovens on hot days and just doesnt do anything for me?
Just my two cents, my experiences in them havn't been great.
I don't really share your point of view. I travel commercial extensively and while TSA has it's issue, it rarely impacts me. Knowing "how" to travel is the key and having airline status perks helps ease the pain; expedited TSA services, priority boarding,,,. The experience is what you make out of it and how you handle it.To me, anything that will help eliminate being self-loading cargo and TSA rape victim is a good thing!
Sounds pretty nice. Are there just a couple of strategically-placed holes on the boom then? Do you have to have a higher flow of oxygen due to some of it potentially escaping? Obviously no oxymizer-type solution here.
How much do you pay for an O2 fill? I've had the Mooney for a year now. It's got a big Kevlar tank in it now, but I've only gone from about 1800 to 1100 PSI with the Oxysaver cannulas. Of course, if I had a turbo I'd go high a lot more often.
I don't really share your point of view. I travel commercial extensively and while TSA has it's issue, it rarely impacts me. Knowing "how" to travel is the key and having airline status perks helps ease the pain; expedited TSA services, priority boarding,,,. The experience is what you make out of it and how you handle it.
I don't really share your point of view. I travel commercial extensively and while TSA has it's issue, it rarely impacts me. Knowing "how" to travel is the key and having airline status perks helps ease the pain; expedited TSA services, priority boarding,,,. The experience is what you make out of it and how you handle it.
Okay, go figure since I wrote this I flew in another arrow today. well I am eating my words because it was a wonderful ride. I guess the previous ones were just crooked...well one I know because the strut went through the wing but hey. This Arrow has given me a little bit of faith in Piper products now. cruised at a solid 135 kts and felt like it actually wanted to fly.
And, of course, as with any type, some examples are better than others.
I don't really share your point of view. I travel commercial extensively and while TSA has it's issue, it rarely impacts me. Knowing "how" to travel is the key and having airline status perks helps ease the pain; expedited TSA services, priority boarding,,,. The experience is what you make out of it and how you handle it.
This one is a III and remarkably different feeling. The others Ive flown were I's 180 hp, and crooked...very poor examples of aircraft.
I pay $80 at the dealer, which is about normal. Sometimes I can find it as cheap as $45. Sometimes it's more. I go through about 6 big tanks a year.
BS you only minimize the pain sometimes. If you travel much you are getting beat like a New Orleans whore and probably in denial that bubba isn't gonna beat you no more for no good reason.
but of course there is tomorrow.
For those of us who don't travel (much) for a living and don't have expedited TSA services, priority boarding, or airline perks... It's a pain in the ass. Luckily I've been able to do all of my work travel via GA, and the type of traveling I do is where GA shines - Non-hub to non-hub airport/areas, mid-range distance (about 500nm), with a coworker. It's way faster (2.5-3 hrs) than either driving (12 hrs) or the airlines (~8-10 hrs) and it's actually cheaper than the airlines as well!
For vacation travel... Well, if I go to Hawaii or Europe or somewhere else that'd be incredibly difficult and expensive via GA it's worth subjecting myself to the hassle of airline travel (tho if I had the money for it, I'd totally charter a G-V instead). Within North America, airline travel really isn't worth it to me. In the Mooney, I can get pretty much anywhere in the ConUS east of the Rockies as fast or faster than the airlines with better comfort, better view, better customer service at both ends, better pretty much everything. And if I'm supposed to be having fun, airline travel sure ain't it.
How many hours do you fly in a year, and how many of those are you breathing O2? What altitudes do you normally fly at?
6 big tanks a year is quite a bit...
I don't know how much an O2 fill is at my home FBO yet. They simply have a 4-tank rig on a trailer. I have gotten a portable tank filled at an FBO for about $35 before tho.
I agree traveling commercial sucks but I can't change the system nor do I have on-demand air charter at my beck and call.
I learned over the years to use what is already in place to make my traveling easier and less hassle free.
But you are happy to pimp for the TSA. WFT.
And you suppose you are the only one around here to do that? And you wonder why you get nailed for saying such stupid things.
I have a problem with losing our rights, tsa, fusion centers, Russia like requirements to document our travels with ID or papers which remind me of WWII movies in Germany nor do I appreciate the TSA apologists.
I do not travel Comm Air anymore and I feel sorry for all those who must do it for their jobs.
The fact that you can minimize their intrusions in now way allows that it is acceptable.
That's a full rental power Turbo arrow.The turbo is about five grand to replace, and you generally go through two of them to one engine TBO. I've had one nearly fail in flight. It was making audible grinding noises and the mechanic said it was probably five minutes away from seizing.
Just now, at 1109 I rolled up at DCA for a 1145 departure. Walked through the TSA 'pre' line without even unhooking my briefcase from the rollaboard. Since 1118 I am sitting in the airline club answering emails. Same deal yesterday, fast-track at Heathrow, a good lunch in United business and about 4 hrs of sleep followed by a seamless trip through CBP and customs at IAD.
It is what you make out of it and how much you are willing to pay. If you travel once a year on Spirit or AirTran, your experience may be different.
Maybe its just my experience with what are probably crooked beat up flight school arrows...but why an arrow when maybe there is a 206 or 210 out there. I cannot stand flying the PA28R-200. Feels underpowered, heavy, ovens on hot days and just doesnt do anything for me?
Just my two cents, my experiences in them havn't been great.
Does weight and balance play a role in the turbo IIs not doing so well? We had one at a flying club I belong to, and it was very easy to load it so that it was out of balance forward, which in turn meant that the nose gear could take a beating, and I always wondered if the engine was not getting beat up when pilots dropped the nose too hard on landing. Of course, too far forward CG could also slow the plane down a lot and make handling seem terrible, as well.
We have a 3 blade prop modification on the club's Arrow I. Two up front and I need some weight in the baggage compartment to keep the CG aft of the forward limit. This does not help handling.
Are you saying that adding weight in the baggage compartment does not help handling or that the forward CG does not help handling?