GVFlyer
Well-known member
- Joined
- Feb 22, 2002
- Posts
- 1,461
If Pete Reynolds and his boys could do it, why didn'y they?Computer Geek said:With the current conditions at KHXD (temp 22 winds 050@5 and a QNH of 30.30)
a "completed" Global could TO at a GW of 79197 lbs in my airplane that is a fuel load of 28200 pounds. I ran a fltplan using Flitestar and it showed a burn of 26272 at .82 its below NBAA IFR reserves but it still makes the trip.
my 2 cents...
CG
Please try to keep your posts in context, this is exactly what I said in response another pilots comment on the stress of ultra long range flights:And as I remember from a previous GV post on one of his record flights he boasted about landing with a "ton of fuel"
"I know exactly what you mean. After some record flights in the old GV demonstrator - sn 502, which was over 1,500 Production Change Orders away from being a real GV (it had been the stress test airplane and had short non- flying pylons, a non-sculpted high drag cockpit roof, bad fuel specifics, - A engines, draggy wings, low capacity fuel cells and so forth), I have had the press approach me and ask, "How much fuel did you have after landing?" and I have truthfully replied, "Oh, I had a ton of fuel!" NBAA fuel reserves for the GV is 2860lbs."
This was not a boast, but an attempt at levity while showing understanding to concerns of another pilot operating in this unique environment. These flights were conducted prior to GV certification in an experimental aircraft normally packed to the gills with people, sales brochures and give-aways for the airshows. Max fuel capacity for serial number 502 was 38,600 lbs as opposed to 41,300 lbs for the much more capable certified GV, yet we still managed to fly it non-stop from Beijing, PRC to Nashville, TN.
The current product, the G550 is guaranteed to fly 6,750 nm at Mach.80 with 8 passengers, a crew of 4 and NBAA reserves against 85% Boeing Winds while burning 9% less fuel than the Global XRS will in flying it's maximum range of 6150nm. At normal cruise, Mach .85, the G550 will fly 6000nm under the same conditions.
It is interesting to note that while Bombardier is still having Entry-Into-Service problems with avionics, auto throttles, performance computers and mystery battery drain, they are now beginning to have aging fleet concerns with new failures occuring to plague their already under-funded Customer Support Network.
GV