After landing, I thought it was funny that he hung a 2 liter Pepsi bottle from some overflow oil line. The next morning, that 2 liter was full!
Been around radial engines much?
Lessee...we carry more than an 802 a lot of the time (lots of those guys hauling out less than six hundred gallons, no matter WHAT the paperwork says), we use less runway, we have a better wing, we have better low speed handling characteristics, we cost less, we're easier to maintain...and what's that about not handling bumps?
Have you flown a Dromader? Didn't think so.
I've taken it in and out of mountain strips that no 802 could use with a load...we use less runway than the 802 and we used it all.
As for 50 fpm...yes, it does get that way, but I've dropped at any altitude requested, often with my full contract load, no problems. A little slower on the cruise, though not by much. I'm also a lot less expensive, certainly less expensive to the taxpayer per gallon of retardant delivered...so yes, by all means, let's go there.
Then again, I've been in heavy tankers when 100 fpm or so was the standard rate of climb...so don't go knocking the dromader on it's climb characteristics. I can put that airplane against a hillside and pop the climb up, use the terrain and the lift...just like one does in a performance limited tanker.
My contract base sits well above 6,000' density altitude pretty much all the time. Lucky for us we don't know what you know, or we'd never get any work done.
I hear 802 pilots badmouthing the M18 all the time...and the truth is always the same. A poor carpenter blames his tools.
My airplane is turbine powered, about like half of the Dromaders on contract. It will go toe to toe with an air tractor, no problems.
As far as crossfeeding and turning...you probably don't know what you're talking about there. I have no issues with it.
Fuel useage "sucks?" You find that a dromader burns more fuel than any other kind of SEAT? I'd surely like to know where you got those performance numbers...especially as we generally take less on the turns than an 802 requires.
You're aware, of course, that current Dromaders from the factory come with a -67 motor (or -65, your choice), and the same capacity hopper as the 802, for less money, with a better wing...right? Probably not.
Good in light to moderate fuels...I was putting loads in Ponderosa and tall fuels last summer at the request of USFS...they requested us by number, and invited us back, again and again. In typical PJ, no problem. Certainly not long line building...but put several of us in rotation, regardless of weather it's a Thrush, 802, or a Drom, and we can hold our own...done it.
You think a Drom is cheap? Bought one lately? Less expensive, yes. Cheap? Not by a long shot. There's a reason it's the most common air tanker in the world, globally...and it's not because it's "cheap."
It's an airplane, and it's got limitations like all aircraft. It's my job to use those limitations. If you, or your ATGS believes that the so-called limitations you've outlined are true, you're sadly misinformed, which only reinforces my point. Dealing with aircraft limitations is my concern, not yours, not your ATGS. The problem we face is that air attacks et al aren't informed enough to know the full capabilities of the aircraft, and thus under utilize it.
Perhaps the most common phrase I hear out there is, "I didn't know you could do that."
Don't believe everything you hear...and certainly don't go around repeating it.