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On May 15, 2:52 pm, scronje wrote:
Crossing those rocks would seem to exclude a C-172 and its friends. It would seem that something of the order of a C-182 or Piper Cherokee 235 would fit the bill. Does anyone here have experience of flying this kind of trip in, say a C-177, or PA Cherokee 180? I usually fly my Cherokee 180 all around the Rockies (in the summer no less). I usually try to keep it a few hundred under gross, but with a usable load of over 1000 lbs., that's not hard. Two guys and a weeks worth of camping gear filling the back seat is no problem. It's right at home in the mountains. Sure, 235 hp on the same airframe would be better, but the 180 hp version will get the job done. I have flown a few Cardinals in mountains. Forget the straight C-177 (150 hp, fast wing). At minimum, you should use a C-177A, or even better would be the C-177B. The B model has the normal wing, 180 hp, and CS prop. All good things for high density altitudes. John Galban=====N4BQ (PA28-180) |
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Hi John
Thank you for your response. On Wed, 16 May 2007 16:26:34 -0700, John Galban wrote: I usually fly my Cherokee 180 all around the Rockies (in the summer no less). I usually try to keep it a few hundred under gross, but with a usable load of over 1000 lbs., that's not hard. Two guys and a weeks worth of camping gear filling the back seat is no problem. It's right at home in the mountains. Sure, 235 hp on the same airframe would be better, but the 180 hp version will get the job done. What sort of climb rates are you seeing at altitude? You don't have any online flying travelogues do you ;-) I would love to know more about your flying experiences in the Rockies with the 180. Where you have flown, that sort of thing. Steve |
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On May 16, 9:00 pm, scronje wrote:
What sort of climb rates are you seeing at altitude? You don't have any online flying travelogues do you ;-) I would love to know more about your flying experiences in the Rockies with the 180. Where you have flown, that sort of thing. At 200 lbs. under gross and 10,000 ft. density altitude, I still see 400-500 fpm in the climb. The caveat here is that it used to be closer to 300 before I put gap seals all around and added Hoerner style wingtips. Travelogue? I think I have just the thing. You can check out my website. It's mostly backcountry airstrips and camping locations. It's at : http://www.johngalban.com/ John Galban=====N4BQ (PA28-180) |
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Hi again, John!!
On Fri, 18 May 2007 17:57:51 -0700, John Galban wrote: At 200 lbs. under gross and 10,000 ft. density altitude, I still see 400-500 fpm in the climb. That sounds pretty impressive. You can check out my website. It's mostly backcountry airstrips and camping locations. It's at : http://www.johngalban.com/ Very neat site! Thank you. I have spent some time looking at it, and taken a look at some of the strips you mention. Many of them are rather close to the route I was discussing How did you "get into" mountain flying? How much dual did you do before you went at it alone? Some of those strips look pretty challenging, at least in the photos. Regards Steve |
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On May 19, 11:59 am, scronje wrote:
How did you "get into" mountain flying? How much dual did you do before you went at it alone? Some of those strips look pretty challenging, at least in the photos. I used to throw a load of camping gear on my motorcycle and head up to the norther Rockies on my summer vacations. When I got a plane, I just kept doing the same, only faster (and more fun). I started flying to easy, unobstructed fields in mountainous areas, then slowly worked my way up to the more challenging strips. Along the way I got a lot of good advice from experienced mountain pilots, and read as much as I could on the subject. I never really had any dual instruction specifically for mountain flying. Coming from AZ, you learn a lot about flying around mountains at high density altitude as part of your private pilot training. Nowadays, there are specialized mountain flying programs for those interested in flying the backcountry, like http://www.mountaincanyonflying.com/ . They will get you up to speed much faster than my "baby steps" approach :-) John Galban=====N4BQ (PA28-180) |
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![]() scronje wrote: How did you "get into" mountain flying? How much dual did you do before you went at it alone? Some of those strips look pretty challenging, at least in the photos. I live at 3650 MSL and learned to fly here and flying and landing on dirt strips is what a lot of us do here. Every day in the summer is a pretty good density altitude day. I didn't know how much performance a 172 or 182 really had until I took it to the midwest. I about **** my pants when on my first takeoff from the Minneapolis area I looked down and saw 31 inches on the manifold pressure gauge. Around here 26 is all you get. We constantly go out and land at off road strips, there's a million of 'em within 50 miles of where I live. Most of the landings I make in the mountains are at the 2500-5000 msl level so my learning was primarily about where to fly in the valleys and becoming comfortable skimming the treetops on final. The actual performance of the airplane is the same as all my flying is in those density altitude conditions. If you have an interest in it go out and start landing at the dirt strips where you live. Pretty soon you'll start to find people who do the same thing. More than likely there's a lot of private strips that you never knew about because you never looked. |
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