According to Curt Johnson :
You can compute flight time from the cruise speed of the aircraft and
the distance involved. Add 20 minutes or so at each end for preflight
checks and parking, fueling, delays...
Love Field (KDAL) is a busy airport, and it's right in the middle of
some very busy airspace. It can be a bit hectic for a small plane, but
there are plenty of small planes in the airspace even during busy
commercial traffic times. I've flown a much smaller Cessna 172 into Love
Field on a high tempo Friday afternoon and wouldn't hesitate to do it
again.
You can see what the airport looks like at:
http://flightaware.com/resources/airport/KDAL/map
As busy airports go, it's actually pretty small -- space constrained
from being located in a dense metropolitan area. Taxi times are quick
and direct. You can be parked and out of the plane within a few minutes
of touching down.
Note the "FBOs" tab on that site. An FBO is a "Fixed Base Operator" and
that's where a pilot would take his plane to refuel, park, and make
arrangements for ground transportation. Love Field has several FBOs
which handle private aircraft of all sizes.
For flight times, here's a Cessna 210 that made the flight from
KAMA to KDAL last September:
http://flightaware.com/live/flight/N...837Z/KAMA/KDAL
The flight took 2 hours and 6 minutes. That's "wheels up" to "wheels
down" not accounting for taxi time.
Here are a bunch of pictures of Cessna 210s:
http://flightaware.com/photos/aircrafttype/C210
If the pilot is flying an instrument flight plan, there are web sites
(flightaware.com is one) that show the radar tracking info. If the pilot
is flying VFR, and not in contact with air traffic control, there is no
record kept.
This is an important point. Any pilot with a C210 can be expected to
have an instrument rating and fly "IFR" with full radar contact with the
FAA for anything more than a short trip. It's that IFR flight plan and
radar contact that allows sites like FlightAware to track an aircraft.
However, there's no requirement at all for an airplane to fly IFR as
long as the weather permits Visual Flight Rules (VFR) flight. If a
pilot wanted to be sneaky, they wouldn't file a flight plan, they'd fly
VFR (weather permitting) and the ability for others to track that flight
or verify the details of travel would be significantly curtailed.
There would still be exposure in the form of FBO staff or enthusiasts
monitoring the (open and unencrypted) radio communications at the
relevant airports. Even flying VFR there are countless witnesses to a
plane's operations and location. Plane spotters, especially at a field
like KDAL might have taken pictures of the plane landing. Someone
refuelled it. It would be parked in the open on "the ramp" at the
airport for some period of time.
Thanks for taking the trouble to do the research. I hate it when the
details are wrong too. It ruins the illusion.
Agreed. So true...
--
David McNett