Well okay, for you guys that like the MU-2 that is fine, but I was already an experienced pilot before I crawled into a MU-2.
I had been a King Air 90, 200 captain, a Jet Commander (1121 and 1123) captain, and a Lear 24/25 captain before I flew a MU-2.
So I will share a few little problems I had with the MU-2.
1. Fire in the cabin. I was a single pilot in a corporate MU-2 and the cabin started filling up with smoke. It was a cabin interior fire coming from the baggage area in a J model, that’s by the only door by the way. I was lucky enough to have an ex-Air Force pilot in the right seat and the weather was VFR. I killed the busses and went back to the baggage area, pulled down the bulkhead and putout the fire, by the way when one kills the busses the door seal deflates and the cabin dumps not to mention the auto pilot no longer works. A resistor for the cigarette lighters caused the fire. 1st AD I was involved with the Mu-2.
2. A brand new MU-2 L, less than 100 hours. Took off and the right power lever (throttle) came back to nearly idle after I retracted the flaps. Now anyone that will tell the truth about these pieces of crap will tell you that any, I mean any change in flaps, gear require massive trim changes. Well I pushed the PL back to where is should have stayed and went on down the road. Second take off that day the same thing happened, yes I had tightened the friction lever down as tight as I could and the same thing happened. So after I landed I crawled under the throttle console and discovered that the wiring bundle for the auto-pilot had wrapped around the bottom of the right throttle and when nose up trim was applied the right throttle would come back to idle. 2nd AD I was involved with on the MU-2
3. On an ILS approach with reported light icing. I was at nearly full power when I hit the runway. The wings and tail surfaces were clear of ice. The problem was the gear pods and the tip tanks ice.
4. I was checking out a pilot on a J model and when he adjusted the friction lever for the throttles he came out of full flaps to (I think, it’s been a long time) to flaps 20 because his little finger accidentally brushed against the flap handle. I had to take the airplane away from him and apply full power to keep from hitting the approach lights. This incident I must take partial blame for, I saw what happened when his finger hit the flap lever and decided to teach him a lesson, it dang near killed us both. Later models of the MU-2 changed the flap lever to a positive lock system.
Those where just the serious stuff, I lost an engine, had a tip tank fuel cap fail (Top part was found on the runway, bottom half was on the bottom of the tank), had to crank the gear down twice because of ice on the gear sensors, three times after landing the main cabin door would not open due to the door seal freezing just to mention a few problems.
But the one thing I will remember more than anything else is the following.
One hot summer day I took off from Salt Lake City and as I went off the end of the runway the tower call and asked if I had lost an engine. I replied that no I had not and I was doing the as best as I could. He called back and said that he was sorry. I replied that he was not near as sorry as I was!