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Mxsmanic wrote in
: You never know when having something to fly the plane for you for a few minutes (or longer) might come in handy. Additionally, on trips of any length, I'm pretty sure I'd get very tired of holding the controls all the time. It's *usually* not that bad. In good weather, with fairly stable air, it's less effort than driving a car for hours on end - much less. And frankly, the little extra work of controlling the yoke helps keep you awake on long flights. [The danger is not so much actually falling asleep, as getting into the flight equivalent of "highway hypnosis."] For IFR flights, especially alone, an autopilot would be invaluable. It would also be extremely useful in congested airspace when there are many other things to do besides flying the plane. Very true. While the pilot should ALWAYS be able to complete the flight flying manually, a working autopilot on a single-pilot IFR flight can be a BIG work saver. There is a lot of other things to do in the cockpit: Charts to find and unfold/fold, approach plates to brief, fixes and routing changes to study, radios and instruments to adjust,... and of course on long flights, lunch! An autopilot, even a simple wing leveler or another set of hands to find or hold stuff for you, can really make life better. Mooney aircraft seem to be unusual in many respects. Their Web site makes them look like they build racing aircraft. Traditionally they built fast aircraft for the power. Not the fastest airplanes in the air, but certainly the fastest on the fuel flow. Now days they have gotten a bit away from that and are pushing higher powered turbocharged models. They are still among the most efficient production aircraft. Their full-time wing-leveler autopilot (standard equipment) was, for years, touted as a significant safety feature. ----------------------------------------------- James M. Knox TriSoft ph 512-385-0316 1300 Koenig Lane West fax 512-371-5716 Suite 200 Austin, Tx 78756 ----------------------------------------------- |
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