On Tue, 31 Oct 2006 03:37:01 -0500, "Happy Dog"
wrote:
"Jose" wrote in message
To me and I believe the FAA defines a flight as the time between take
off and landing, two circuits with touch and goes equals two flights
although you only make the one entry in the log book.
As far as the FAA is concerned, you can pick just about any takeoff and
any (subsequent) landing and call it a flight.
(First person comments not directed at the above poster.)
Or not. Absent culpability, nobody cares. The original poster made some
claim to the effect that hours on Cessnas are similar to hours on Cirruses
when it comes to comparing accident stats. They aren't. If it was cheaper
to own a Cirrus than anything else, almost anyone would own one. I put a
This might be true in most cases, but not all. One couple was
interested in purchasing an F33 Bo. They flew my Deb and after doing
stalls and finding out how slipery it is, purchased a newer Piper
Archer for more money. They said they decided they wanted to stick
with something simple. Although it has fixed gear and no prop control
the SR-22 is definately not a simple airplane to fly.
bunch of expensive avionics and a parachute, in an ultralight mostly because
I could afford to. With only a couple adorable exceptions, fellow pilots
all whined about my choices. Who cares?
Did you buy a new Cirrus instead of an old pressurized twin? Did you get
PPL on the way up and then lose interest and get a jet and a crew?
Nobody else's business. When there's a consensus among filthy rich hobby
pilots, I'll be grateful.
moo
Roger Halstead (K8RI & ARRL life member)
(N833R, S# CD-2 Worlds oldest Debonair)
www.rogerhalstead.com