Lead Sled
Sitt'n on the throne...
- Joined
- Apr 1, 2004
- Posts
- 2,066
I flew Astras for a company that put 700+ hours a year on each one of four airplanes. At the place I work now, we flew a pretty constant 120 hours a year. The airplanes are very reliable. Our last on (a Classic) sat for over a year prior to our purchase. It was a nightmare until we knocked the rust off of it, it took about 6 months, but after that it was like the Ever Ready Bunny - and we only flew it about 10 hour a month.These Planes like to fly, my experience is that they have many electrical anomalies when they sit for long periods. I am guessing this has to due with moisture in the Bonnet area (avionics bay)
In addition, it is always a crap shoot with regards to Slats deploying (Classic). The one weak system is the flap/slat system.
Cabin is nothing spectacular, however, the speed and low fuel consumption offsets this. In additional, the TO/Land numbers are fairly impressive.
Otherwise, except for the Human Factors nuisances (cockpit switch labeling), these are good machines.
The slat-flap issues are pretty much in the past in any of the airplanes. Granted, they are over engineered, but all it takes is proper and timely maintenance. Do that and you'll seldom, if ever, have a problem. If you don't do it, then you'll get what you're asking for. We went for 4 years in 4 airplanes (a Classic, 2 SPs, and an SPX) - about 12,000 flight hours - without a single slat-flap problem and we didn't use any reduced extension speeds. Just maintain them correctly. I've had my share of failures, but it was during the period when our mechanics were trying to figure out the system.
The electrical glitches seem to correspond with being kept outside in the rain. The airplane definitely likes to be hangared.
LS