David Megginson
Pattern Altitude
Exactly, and much higher fuel consumption per passenger too, at least for smaller aircraft.Totally different animal. The turbine runs smoothly with little vibration. The pressures in the system are constant, not changing from 800 psi to less than zero 1300 times a minute. There are no reciprocating loads. The metals used in the turbine are pretty exotic. All of it adds up to many more dollars per horsepower compared to a piston engine.
I remember chatting with an acquaintance who flew bizjets (not his own), and we figured out that he burned about the same amount of fuel on long taxi to the runway as I burned flying my family 2½ hours from Ottawa to NYC in my 160 hp Piper — about 23 gallons in both cases. For short hops at low altitude, it's hard to beat our old piston engines for efficiency.