deadstick
Pucker Factor: HIGH
- Joined
- Jul 27, 2002
- Posts
- 706
Flywrite -- chill! Jeez…
From the mouth of A&P at a Cirrus Service Center with 40+ years of experience "Give them another 6-7 years and they might have something." They are making a ton of money on Cirrus mx.
Just how many "catastrophic airframe failures" have happened out of the blue? I really have no idea. But I do know that several have happened for some other reason, like exceeding load limits. On a side note, I understand that it’s usually the negative limit that is exceeded. The CAPS system is a "+" when the aircraft is being flown by an inexperienced pilot who makes poor decisions -- unless the aircraft really is a P.O.S. For 135, the pilot shouldn't be an issue. Forget about the traffic pattern stall/spin scenario because the aircraft is too low for deployment. Scratch the enroute structural failures, too, because if you are scooting around at 180 kts and the wing falls off, what is the likelihood that you will be able to slow to the 130 or so kts max chute speed? The chute isn't the answer.
I believe that Andrew_VT was discussing other spin-tested, non-parachute-requiring “modern, glass cockpit single” and not a “40-year-old POS Apache.” The Columbia, G36, Saratoga, 6X, and the Cessna 206 – all fit that bill. Here are some facts:
Staying with the non-turbo models with AC
SR22 GTS: $449,995
Columbia 350SLX: $485,900
six-seaters that can carry more....
G36: $ 690,910
Saratoga II HP: $594,380
6X: $533,280
206H: $476,600
apples-to-apples with other 4-seaters…
182T: $351,600
Ovation 2GX: $438,000 (ac?)
The SR22 GTS is not the most expensive, but almost $100k more than the least expensive model.
From the mouth of A&P at a Cirrus Service Center with 40+ years of experience "Give them another 6-7 years and they might have something." They are making a ton of money on Cirrus mx.
Just how many "catastrophic airframe failures" have happened out of the blue? I really have no idea. But I do know that several have happened for some other reason, like exceeding load limits. On a side note, I understand that it’s usually the negative limit that is exceeded. The CAPS system is a "+" when the aircraft is being flown by an inexperienced pilot who makes poor decisions -- unless the aircraft really is a P.O.S. For 135, the pilot shouldn't be an issue. Forget about the traffic pattern stall/spin scenario because the aircraft is too low for deployment. Scratch the enroute structural failures, too, because if you are scooting around at 180 kts and the wing falls off, what is the likelihood that you will be able to slow to the 130 or so kts max chute speed? The chute isn't the answer.
I believe that Andrew_VT was discussing other spin-tested, non-parachute-requiring “modern, glass cockpit single” and not a “40-year-old POS Apache.” The Columbia, G36, Saratoga, 6X, and the Cessna 206 – all fit that bill. Here are some facts:
Staying with the non-turbo models with AC
SR22 GTS: $449,995
Columbia 350SLX: $485,900
six-seaters that can carry more....
G36: $ 690,910
Saratoga II HP: $594,380
6X: $533,280
206H: $476,600
apples-to-apples with other 4-seaters…
182T: $351,600
Ovation 2GX: $438,000 (ac?)
The SR22 GTS is not the most expensive, but almost $100k more than the least expensive model.