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King air 90 vs 200

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plucky

Well-known member
Joined
Jan 21, 2004
Posts
56
Just curious as to the difference in fuel burn between King Air 90 and the 200. Also do you need a type for the King air 200?
 
Don't know the fuel burn differences, but I know a type is not needed for the 200.
 
300 is a higher gross weight version of the 200, as I understand it. 200 has "smiles" for air inlets, while the 300's inlets are rectangular. That' the only way I can tell them apart.


350 is longer, with a double club arrangement.
Not sure if there is a type difference between the 300/350. I would hope not, they must fly pretty much the same. Oh yeah, chicks digs winglets (and money). :D
 
not sure which model 90 you are asking about but in the 200 we see 800lbs/hour down low and 600-650 at the higher altitudes. It can get better but we never get out of the low 20's.

the E90 at max cruise power @10,000 will brun about 700/hour. Up in the low 20's 450-500/hour.

The 300 has a MTOW of 14,000 vs the 200's 12,500
 
Last edited:
minitour said:
Which are the same type, correct?
Yeap, same type. Sorry for the confusion.

And from what I've been told, back in the day the King Air type rating also encompassed the Beech 1900 as well. But they've since changed it to where the 1900 is a different type.
 
Last edited:
User997 said:
Yeap, same type. Sorry for the confusion.

No worries...

I've also heard they're similar to the Beech 1900...any authoritative sources out there care to chime in?

-mini
 
BE200Driver said:
not sure which model 90 you are asking about but in the 200 we see 800lbs/hour down low and 600-650 at the higher altitudes. It can get better but we never get out of the low 20's.

the E90 at max cruise power @10,000 will brun about 700/hour. Up in the low 20's 450-500/hour.

The 300 has a MTOW of 14,000 vs the 200's 12,500

I agree. Our B200 (PT6-42 = 850 shp) operates 350 hrs Block/310 Flight (Hobbs) per year. Average 1.4 Block/leg, 1.2 Flight/leg and 98 gal/Block Hour at 6.7 lbs/gal = 656 lbs/hr. Mix of legs as short as 50 nm and up to 900 nm, average 276 nm/leg and altitudes 5000 to FL 270, probably averaging FL 220 - 230. We run at 750 ITT or 2050 ft-lbs and 270 (summer)-275 KTAS (winter) (based in the South) at altitude. Training notes I have put a C-90 (PT6A-21= 550 shp) at 500# 1st hr, 400# 2nd hr if above FL180 and a 200 (PT6-41= 850 shp) at 700# 1st hr, 600 # after if above FL220.
 
cvsfly said:
I agree. Our B200 (PT6-42 = 850 shp) operates 350 hrs Block/310 Flight (Hobbs) per year. Average 1.4 Block/leg, 1.2 Flight/leg and 98 gal/Block Hour at 6.7 lbs/gal = 656 lbs/hr. Mix of legs as short as 50 nm and up to 900 nm, average 276 nm/leg and altitudes 5000 to FL 270, probably averaging FL 220 - 230. We run at 750 ITT or 2050 ft-lbs and 270 (summer)-275 KTAS (winter) (based in the South) at altitude. Training notes I have put a C-90 (PT6A-21= 550 shp) at 500# 1st hr, 400# 2nd hr if above FL180 and a 200 (PT6-41= 850 shp) at 700# 1st hr, 600 # after if above FL220.


whoa....

I've been choked up about the 40 gal/hour block fuel flows I've been burning in my 340, since trading up from a Bonanza.

I know you can't really compare the two like apples to apples, but out of curiosity....what kind of airspeeds are you getting out of the E90 and 200 while in the low 20's?
 

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