RV-6AIt sounds awesome. What's it based on?
Not sure there are enough out there to draw a conclusion. There are a slew of modifications that can/should be done to make them aircraft worthy. Sadly by the time you do that you are getting into small continental or Lycoming money.How does the corvair engine hold up? Is it reliable?
Well, there's two of them in case one fails...How does the corvair engine hold up? Is it reliable?
How does the corvair engine hold up? Is it reliable?
"Twin Jag" is worse in every measure vs just calling it "RV66" and throwing Van an official tongue-waggle.
Well, there's two of them in case one fails...
If Vans is like Sonex, they don't want their name mentioned at all. A Corvair on a Sonex is verboten by the kit supplier.
BTW - JAG is for Jim And Ginger!
I doubt they trademarked the letters R and V and what could they even do about it?
I'd install a BRS before I went to a twin
Then you are in the category of people that aren't willing to commit to training enough to fly twins.
No shame there, but I would rather have another engine than a BRS.
Make it to the other side of the lake to land for repairs, maybe even get a restart, turn back to land, etc. Even shoot an approach to a bonafide airport!
OR!!
Float gently downward, not toward the shore, to almost certain hypothermia and death within an hour. Sure you could pack a raft and some space blankets, but if you've ever been on, over, or near Lake Michigan when it's angry you'd understand why those items night not do you any good anyway.
The Coast Guard is wonderful, but even their helicopter might not get swimmers to you in time. In fact, it's more likely they won't.
"I don't fly over water like that so your scenario is moot!" someone may think.
Ok, how about those giant, mature North American hardwood stands? Or our sizeable inland lakes? It gets pretty remote pretty fast in this glorious country (and in many others!). Do you have the skills and equipment to survive overnight after deploying your BRS? You might have to.
Just things I think about often. Yesterday I flew an ILS with the critical engine dead, and even had to go around on one. This is why we train.
That's quite a bit of fan fiction.
You never really hear much about the people who pulled the chute and died, do you? Maybe because they don't?
Two engines don't stop CFIT, do they? When you run out of gas, what does that second engine do for you? Other than increase the amount og kinetic energy you have to dissipate when you slam into the ground.
I have no desire to look up stats, but I bet a warm diet walmart cola that more people died in twin engine crashes than in in BRS events (aka the BRS is deployed).
The fallacy that dragging around a spare engine is a good idea is not really that good of an idea. I'd rather float gently down immediately than try and nurse a dying /dead plane to something resembling any sort of landing strip.
Nice pun on "pop quiz"I consider a BRS equivalent safety to a second engine.
In addition to the (mucho) extra gas for very (sigh, VERY) few extra knots, I consider the second engine also costs me 20 hours of training/practice per year.
There is some crossover point where I'd have been better off just buying a Cirrus to begin with. I think it's still in the 15-20 year range, though, so I continue to enjoy the fuel economy of an oil fire, the (self-imposed) recurrent training demands of an MU2 pilot, and relative calm when flying over rocks and water and over LIFR.
I would agree that twins are likely much more lethal than BRS-equipped aircraft pilots, even normalizing for the recent availability of the BRS and hours flown. It's just more work to do twins well, and safely, and you never reallllly know if you've done it all well enough until the pop quiz.
You have to love stats! Of course single-engine fixed-gear airplanes make up around 87% of fuel starvation accidents. They also make up more than 87% of all accidents. 87% of the fleet. 87% of training aircraft...Single engine fixed-gear airplanes make up over 70% of fuel starvation accidents if you thumb through the Nall report. Single complex is next at roughly 17%. Multi-engine, just over 11%.
You have to love stats! Of course single-engine fixed-gear airplanes make up around 87% of fuel starvation accidents. They also make up more than 87% of all accidents. 87% of the fleet. 87% of training aircraft...
AOPA reports that in 2017, the number of airplanes active in general aviation were:
Single Engine 130,330 90%
Multi Engine 12,935 10%
I fully admit that I haven't done the math to account for the fact that there are just more single-engine airplane operations in a given sample
It just gets tricky when looking at stats and I don't know what the right answer is. I'm sure the Cessna 172 and Vans Aircraft have more fatalities than other aircraft... also make up a huge amount of the fleet.You: View attachment 99116
At least I went and got some numbers at all. The amount of times I see pilots make safety decisions based on conjecture from the less-than-50-hours-per-year peanut gallery is troubling.
BRS systems have only been available on certified GA airplanes for a handful of years compared to the many decades twins have been around.
Hey, I'm sensitive about my hands!It's been 20+ years for Cirrus.
That's a really big hand with a lot of fingers.
Light twins have been around for much longer than that.
No fiction at all.
BRS systems have only been available on certified GA airplanes for a handful of years compared to the many decades twins have been around.
You can't say "you never really hear about XYZ do you?" and then follow it up with "I have no desire to look up stats." That's just a horrible way to convince someone to take you seriously and grants no weight to your judgement of what qualifies as, "fan fiction."
Single engine fixed-gear airplanes make up over 70% of fuel starvation accidents if you thumb through the Nall report. Single complex is next at roughly 17%. Multi-engine, just over 11%.
This is NOT to say these things can't or don't happen, which is the overall point I was making. I can't drink diet soda, but I appreciate the offer.
Deploying a BRS in that shiny plastic bird that starts with a "C" totals the airplane. I'm not really keen on that. Not to mention the mandatory $12k repack every ten years. Starts to look more like an expense sheet for a Robinson!
With respect to CFIT: just 1% were multi-engine. I fully admit that I haven't done the math to account for the fact that there are just more single-engine airplane operations in a given sample. But I'd bet the weighted figure won't make up for a 99% gap...
That said, I'm very pleased that lives have been saved by BRS deployments over the last decade or so. But it would be a statistical fallacy to assume that those accidents would have resulted in fatalities if the BRS wasn't there or wasn't used. Some would, but definitely not all of them.
I can fly just as fast and just as far in a twin as you can in a modern piston single. It may (not always) cost more in fuel, but the airplane also didn't cost $1.2 mil....
Aviation is about risk management. I'm comfortable flying twins because I fly a lot and train on every flight. "Dragging around a spare engine," as you say, turns out to be a real useful thing in the right mission and with consistent training to maintain the appropriate skills. It's just not always the most practical option for everyone for a whole host of reasons. That's all perfectly fine.
I will agree that the level of pilot training is the more important factor.
I did find this the most enlightening (and somewhat recent)
https://www.avweb.com/ownership/do-you-really-want-a-twin/
The two aren't really comparable, just a few examples:I'd install a BRS before I went to a twin.
!!! I totally agreeThen you are in the category of people that aren't willing to commit to training enough to fly twins.
No shame there, but I would rather have another engine than a BRS.
That's a spurious data point. You also never really hear much about people who have an engine issue in a twin and make it home safely. Sure, people die in twins. People also die in planes with chutes, and in planes that "have a roll bar and amazing glide range".. and to boot people have also died pulling the chute, not many, but they have. The COPA page lists all chute pulls, including the fatals. I'm a HUGE fan of what Cirrus has done, it's the best modern compromise of speed and comfort, but the chute is not a panacea.You never really hear much about the people who pulled the chute and died
I've been on a multi kick but there are applications where I miss the chute. It's nice always having that ultimate bail out option. But when push comes to shove at night or over the water you just can't replace the second engine, in my opinion. The current state of the world puts me in the minority but whateverI consider a BRS equivalent safety to a second engine.
This is absolutely true. I used to fly anything someone would give me the keys to. Then I got into the maintenance world.... That opportunism faded quicklyIf you ever look at the maintenance records of some of the certified AC you would probably not fly them either. 10-20-50+ year old airframe is can have scary maintenance repairs/alterations... And who knows what wasn't logged during that time?
I'd take a factory repaired SR22. When you think about it, even factory overhauled zero timed engines may contain used parts like cases/cranks etc as long and they meet new specs. That's the scary part.