BrianNC
En-Route
Ok....now I want a Panthera.
And supposedly 4 people for 1000 nautical miles at 200 KTS cruise at 10 gallons an hour.
Ok....now I want a Panthera.
When I fly I’m always full throttle, it’s a normally aspirated engine above 5000’, why not. But I never cruise at max RPM, it sounds hard in the engine, where if I reduce RPMs to 2400-2600 it purrs like kitten. I guess this explains why Cirrus has a reputation of not making TBO without replacing cylinders.RE: blue knob. In my limited time with a 182 I couldn't figure out what was so great about the prop control.
(ps - you still get a blue knob in the Cirrus, it's just integrated into the throttle)
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When I fly I’m always full throttle, it’s a normally aspirated engine above 5000’, why not. But I never cruise at max RPM, it sounds hard in the engine, where if I reduce RPMs to 2400-2600 it purrs like kitten.
When I fly I’m always full throttle, it’s a normally aspirated engine above 5000’, why not. But I never cruise at max RPM, it sounds hard in the engine, where if I reduce RPMs to 2400-2600 it purrs like kitten. I guess this explains why Cirrus has a reputation of not making TBO without replacing cylinders.
When I fly I’m always full throttle, it’s a normally aspirated engine above 5000’, why not. But I never cruise at max RPM, it sounds hard in the engine, where if I reduce RPMs to 2400-2600 it purrs like kitten. I guess this explains why Cirrus has a reputation of not making TBO without replacing cylinders.
The Cirruses I have flown we run at 2,500 RPM in cruise, and that's how the linkage is set up for cruise. That's right in your sweet spot range. If people aren't making TBO it's not because of RPM, it's because they're running CHT's too hot or generally not managing their powerplant wellBut I never cruise at max RPM, it sounds hard in the engine, where if I reduce RPMs to 2400-2600 it purrs like kitten. I guess this explains why Cirrus has a reputation of not making TBO without replacing cylinders.
If we're keeping it aviation related then here you go: https://www.controller.com/listings/aircraft/for-sale/1407721/2011-cirrus-sr22-g3-turbo or https://www.controller.com/listings/aircraft/for-sale/25978297/2009-cirrus-sr22-g3-turbo and you'll have plenty of cash left over for maintenance, gas, etc.So... wonder what would be better use of that stack of dust gathering cash?
I love my Mooney! That said, if I had $900,000 laying around gathering dust, I wouldn’t buy a new one for many reasons.
I have heard more than once about the Mooney sales staff being pompous. Very offputting. So... wonder what would be better use of that stack of dust gathering cash?
As far as I have seen, they have met the 4 passengers full fuel goal (using 175#). They have fallen a bit short on the cruise speed but are getting about 192 kts at fast cruise with an IO-540 (the mogas approved version which is why they swapped out the 390 because it was never going to get mogas) Stepping up to the 540 made them also miss the 10 GPH. The latest numbers are about 175 kts at 10 GPH.And supposedly 4 people for 1000 nautical miles at 200 KTS cruise at 10 gallons an hour.
If you look at how the linkage works in a Cirrus, the first bit of travel rearward of the “power lever” reduces RPM while maintaining full throttle.
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I think the owners of Cirrus and Mooney are radically different. Cirrus are owned by an aviation arm of the Chinese government. They want airplanes, just in case. You know, if USAF uses Cirrus for training, surely there's some utility to the airplanes? Also, they like being the makers of the only single-engine jet in the world. Again, who knows, what if it makes it big? So it's all aviation for them. But Mooney's owners are incidentals. I think they don't care about aviation for a use other than prestige, or have it farmed to a 10th nephew.What is meijings interest in Mooney then? I would have guessed the same as cirrus capital ownership.
I also love my, uh, plane. and although if I also had a cool mil laying around for a new plane purchase, it also would most likely not be a Mooney.
I gotta admit I find it humorously ironic that some of the most expensive personal use piston airplanes in the world are being made by a unit of the Chinese government.
Bit of a nitpick, but that's not how the throttle quadrant linkage works, and the video itself shows this. You will maintain 2500 through the portion of throttle movement where the channel is angularly neutral. This corresponds to part throttle settings.
The wide open throttle setting happens only in one position: the throttle quadrant forward stop. In that setting the cam has pushed the prop to 2700. There would have to be a cam on the throttle cable as well, for the power lever to move back while the throttle remains at WOT. That is not the case for the throttle cable in the cirrus; It is linearly variable and physically affixed to the power lever.
IOW, it is impossible for the cirrus to run WOT position at anything other than 2700.
What would it be then?
Total single engine piston deliveries in 2017: 936
Cirrus SR22, 22T: 309
Cirrus SR20: 46
Piper (all of them): 155
Bonanza: 13
Skyhawk: 129
Skylane: 46
206: 40
TTx: 23
Mooney (all of them): 7
**I really don't think it's cost. It's an easy thing to say "ahh,$800K!!" but if it was purely cost driven Cirrus would be in line with these others... but they're not, they're not even in the same league. And given the average cost of housing in NY, MA, CA, etc., the cost of a new airplane is not at all out of line of what a typical house costs. People can afford these things, they just aren't interested.
ok, I lied a little, it 'might' be a mooney. dunno, I'd have to test fly a new one to see. but with a cool mil I'd be test flying a whole lot to see what I liked best. could be cirrus, could be something else. I don't recall, can u get an M350 for a mil? that's in a price range I'm far from familiar with all the options out there.
Good lord. Kurt Tank put a (mechanical) computer into FW-190 in 1940 just so you didn't have to adjust the mixture. Why would anyone want a meaningless workload 70 years later?I want to control the airplane, which means controlling the engine (rpm, mixture...) and if I have a electrical problem, looking into footwell to check if a CB has tripped or trying find the one I want to pull sounds like a good way to lose control of the plane.
To be fair, M10J was supposed to be the retractable gear version and M10T had a fixed gear, because fleet operators have varying preferences. Still, the point is well taken. They are going to cry like little girls when Cirrus announces SR18 that they were testing recently.They never should have cancelled the M10 that could have ushered in Mooney V2.0 and built a new step up program for them. And notice it is not RG
anyways, does anyone have a cool mil laying around so I can buy a new mooney?
Good lord. Kurt Tank put a (mechanical) computer into FW-190 in 1940 just so you didn't have to adjust the mixture. Why would anyone want a meaningless workload 70 years later?
I doubt there are many Cirrus SR22 / 22T fleet sales.. if anything that will help Cessna and Piper's numbers, and make Cirrus look even better if we pull Cessna / Piper fleet sales outFor example, how many of the above sales represent a personal purchase vs. fleet purchase? Also you need to consider available used inventory.
I guess my point is.. without Cirrus you wouldn't really see the other makers pick up that slack. If they didn't exist I bet you would have seen 600 total sales not 936. Because, to your point.. outside of schools and fleets people would be buying used. Cirrus created its own market. They tapped into this "non existent" buyer pool where even the $250K Icons / LSAs, $400K Skyhawks, etc., could not sell. For reference, there are 9.4 million individuals in the US with a net worth between $1M and $5M, then an additional 1.4 million individuals with a net worth over $5M. There are 7,000 Cirrus out there. Sure, there are only 600,000 "active" pilots in the US.. but I talked to many people at the Cirrus tent at EAA who specifically earned their pilot license strictly to buy and fly a Cirrus. My own CSIP, most of his "students" are only flying CirrusI'm not denying there are a lot of well off folks, but how many of them are pilots? How many people have two homes or can afford a second home? I don't follow your affordability argument...
I wish we had better sales data on used planes.. but the TTx was also "new" with very little real used market (like Cirrus) and yet they sold 23 while Cirrus sold 309 (the TTx is faster even, and with so many people hating the chute and the missing blue knob you would think TTx sales should have been even stronger.. but they're basically non existent because they weren't marketed). So even doing a more apples / apples comparison shows that Textron just really isn't doing any marketing effort for GA. You kind of made my point though.. if Cessna had done a better job of innovating they wouldn't have written themselves out. A g1 avidyne Cirrus is a LOT different from a g6 perspective. A 172N and a 172P might as well be the exact same plane. There is honestly no reason to buy a new Skyhawk or Skylane.. it's the same plane it was in 1950 with a G1000 shoehorned in. I was actually just looking at a nice Skylane in the LA area for sale for $55K.. would be cool to own, that's a bargain for a capable little planeCirrus has delivered over 6,000 aircraft, but in comparison, Cessna has produced over 75,000 C172, C182, C206 aircraft. You can buy a nice used Cessna at a substantial discount compared to new
sorry to nitpick, but that's 15 points, or more like 65% more. IE, to move from 23% (if we're only adding Skyhawk, Skylane, and 206) to 38% then Cessna would have to sell 65% more airplanes to match Cirrus (215 X 1.65 = 355) That's a league of their own.. and that's giving Cessna a lot of padding with fleet sales to big schoolslooking at the above numbers Cirrus had 38% of the market compared to Cessna's 23% so that's only 15% more market share
If I have a electrical problem, looking into footwell to check if a CB has tripped or trying find the one I want to pull sounds like a good way to lose control of the plane.
Prepare to have your mind blown!
Just the other day I was flying and the batteries on my ANR headset bit the dust. Despite the lack of an autopilot, I managed to reach into the back seat, find the battery bag, take some new ones out, take the old ones out of the headset, put the new ones in, powered the headset back up and stowed the dead batteries where they belong.
Not impressed yet? I've done that probably 20 times over the years! It's amazing I'm still alive taking these kinds of risks in non-emergency situations!
I keep mine in the attic so it is a hot mil. Sorry.I also love my, uh, plane. and although if I also had a cool mil laying around for a new plane purchase, it also would most likely not be a mooney. HOWEVER, it would NOT be because I heard one or two people online say they ran into a cranky sales guy at osh. for the person who mentioned the mooneyspace thread, there was like one or two people who said they had a bad experience, but everyone else all said they had a good one. either way, my decision will be based solely on my own experience and not from BS internet talk, which is usually BS. oh, I said that already. anyways, does anyone have a cool mil laying around so I can buy a new mooney?
Were you in IMC?