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I did mine in an Aerostar because it's what the boss had. Brought up a guy from Vero Beach, can't remember his name now, but he was really good. It was a handful, but it made me really learn how to fly. The only downside was that Aerostars are always the center of attention, so every time I screwed up a landing, everybody at the airport was watching.Aerostar for the win.
Have trained in the Duchess Be-76 for years, it is the best for training, I think. Version I fly has the unfeathering accumulators.
Did my ATP in a seminole, not even close to the Duchess.
...and yet they do,..consistantly,..what's up with that? ??It's a wonder that Sheble's airplanes make it back to the ground in one piece, let alone get airborne.
i would love to fly a twin comanche. 200 mph on 16 gph would be a dream. here in jax though it looks like atp for the 4 hour quickie, or a crappy seneca 1 going for a mere $300 an hour dual. ouch! if i could only afford to do the rating in the beech 58- what a machine......
$300 an hr dual?
OMG.
Grumman Cougar - IF, and that's a big IF... you can find one to rent. VERY docile. Cheaper than a -44 or BE76 because it used O-320s vs -360s, but had the same performace. Think of it as a totally nerfed Comanche...same economy, but MUCH simpler and easier to handle. Rare even when they were made, I can't imagine there are any to rent.
We actually have one of those available for rent in the Cincy/Dayton area. One catch tho: you have to be a member of the aero club at WPAFB and to do that you kinda have to be active or retired military.