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The first speed that comes to mind should be reprogrammed to
be Vyse, you'll live much longer. If you look at an old multiengine manual, such as the Beech BE 95-55 they advertised very short take-off and landing distances and the plane will do them. But you would rotate 10 knots below Vmc and fly the final at about Vmc. If the engines were running, no problem. Loss of an engine meant almost immediate crash unless you were very quick and lucky. Modern POH says, rotate at not less than Vmc+5, accelerate to Vxse-Vyse quickly. Gear remains down until Vyse or you're out of runway to land straight ahead or you reach circling minimums. On landing, maintain Vyse until landing assured. "Emily" wrote in message . .. | Jim Macklin wrote: | I didn't mean to say that either. Vmca (Vmcg too) are very | important, but Vyse is the first performance number for a | light twin [along with Vxse], similar to V2 for a transport | category aircraft. | Vyse is shown by the blue line and that is the target | airspeed. | | | I have a multi rating, thank (two of them, actually). | | I was simply throwing out the first airspeed that came to mind. |
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