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On 4/22/2011 6:24 AM, Louann Miller wrote:
I know very little about small planes, and I am trying to gather information for a piece of fiction. I need a plausible aircraft that seats six for a character. Not the most expensive luxury thing in the world, but something moderate and in good condition. What kind of plane would fit these requirements? He has a large piece of rural land. It would be great if he can keep the aircraft there and have a landing strip. What would this involve in the way of equipment, other people, etc? How big would it have to be? Flying into Dallas, Texas, where would such a plane land? I assume not DFW at all. Does Love Field have facilities for this kind of plane or would it be one of the even smaller airports like Addison? Would someone who flies into Dallas often have hangar space rented at an airport? What would be the flight time from the Amarillo area to Dallas and vice versa? What would be the investment, time and money, for someone to get this kind of pilot's license without learning to fly in the military? And for the plot, I'm thinking about this man telling his wife he went to town A when he actually flew to town B. Would there be any records to trace his movements later on? Either that the wife could find out about herself or that the police could find while investigating a crime. I hate it when novels get these kinds of details wrong, would appreciate some advice so I don't make that kind of mistake. Thanks, Louann Miller A Beechcraft Baron, or Piper Malibu would fit the bill. Read the Wikipedia articles on them to get some more info. Private air strips are fairly common. A 3500' runway will accomodate a Malibu easily. Private traffic is allowed into DFW, but in practice, most private pilots avoid the largest ("Class B") airports because of the congestion and often excessive landing fees. Airnav.com is a good resource. It will give you information about airports and services provided. 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... Figure $10,000 in training, more or less, for a private pilot certificate (not a license, although it is commonly referred to as one). More for a instrument rating. 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. Thanks for taking the trouble to do the research. I hate it when the details are wrong too. It ruins the illusion. Curt |
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