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True Cost Of Twin Ownership



 
 
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  #11  
Old July 8th 08, 02:59 AM posted to rec.aviation.owning
Newps
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Default True Cost Of Twin Ownership


You're right. Engines rarely become loose.




~^ beancounter ~^ wrote:
" when flying IFR that if I loose an engine
I've got some better options than with a single"

the accident data does not support that....


  #12  
Old July 8th 08, 04:07 PM posted to rec.aviation.owning
cwby-flyer
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Default True Cost Of Twin Ownership

On Jul 7, 4:56*pm, "~^ beancounter ~^" wrote:
" when flying IFR that if I loose an engine
I've got some better options than with a single"

the accident data does not support that....


The problem with that is there's no data concerning engine outs where
the pilot lands successfully.

Mike


  #13  
Old July 8th 08, 06:46 PM posted to rec.aviation.owning
~^ beancounter ~^
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Default True Cost Of Twin Ownership

The twin accident statistics are one thing.
An individual's skills, judgement and training
will cause a specific outcome that may or may
not follow the statistics.



true...i have heard it stated when a engine goes out in a
single...there is no doubt you are landing soon...in a
twin, the challenge is to keep it flying one one.....

  #14  
Old July 9th 08, 06:28 PM posted to rec.aviation.owning
~^ beancounter ~^
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Default True Cost Of Twin Ownership


The problem with that is there's no data concerning engine outs where
the pilot lands successfully.

Mike


true...i have heard it stated when a engine goes out in a
single...there is no doubt you are landing soon...in a
twin, the challenge is to keep it flying on one engine.....


  #15  
Old July 9th 08, 09:50 PM posted to rec.aviation.owning
Paul kgyy
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Default True Cost Of Twin Ownership

On Jul 9, 12:28 pm, "~^ beancounter ~^" wrote:
The problem with that is there's no data concerning engine outs where
the pilot lands successfully.


Mike


true...i have heard it stated when a engine goes out in a
single...there is no doubt you are landing soon...in a
twin, the challenge is to keep it flying on one engine.....


In a twin, the remaining engine will take you to the scene of the
accident :-)

Being current and proficient is the key, but that adds to your expense.
  #16  
Old July 10th 08, 03:34 AM posted to rec.aviation.owning
~^ beancounter ~^
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Posts: 103
Default True Cost Of Twin Ownership


In a twin, the remaining engine will take you to the scene of the
accident :-)

Being current and proficient is the key, but that adds to your expense.



one word... "yaw'
  #17  
Old July 13th 08, 04:48 PM
rotor&wing rotor&wing is offline
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Default

Quote:
Originally Posted by ~^ beancounter ~^ View Post

In a twin, the remaining engine will take you to the scene of the
accident :-)

Being current and proficient is the key, but that adds to your expense.



one word... "yaw'
FWIW, I currently own a 1974 Cessna 337G Skymaster. This is my second one (the first was a 337A model).

I get 160/165 knots true airspeed on 20 gallons/per hour. Extremely economical to own and operate.

The down side is lack of baggage room unless you have a belly pod. I removed the aft 2 seats and only use mine as a 4 place, so this gives me adequate baggage. Insurance is reasonable also.
  #18  
Old July 13th 08, 05:45 PM posted to rec.aviation.owning
~^ beancounter ~^
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Default True Cost Of Twin Ownership

Takes care of the "yaw" factor, when a motor goes out, right?
I like to looks of the skymaster...But, for my profile, training, and
hrs in type...I am sticking to high performance, single engine
cessnas...

182rg, or 210 most likely......looking for a partnership somehwere
along the colorado front range airports....I am kaning ocassional
flights to Hermosillo Mex....


FWIW, I currently own a 1974 Cessna 337G Skymaster. This is my second
one (the first was a 337A model).

I get 160/165 knots true airspeed on 20 gallons/per hour. Extremely
economical to own and operate.

The down side is lack of baggage room unless you have a belly pod. I
removed the aft 2 seats and only use mine as a 4 place, so this gives
me adequate baggage. Insurance is reasonable also.

--
rotor&wing


  #19  
Old July 13th 08, 10:23 PM posted to rec.aviation.owning
~^ beancounter ~^
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Default True Cost Of Twin Ownership

thank you Clary...I will take a l@@k next time
I pass through the terminal...

cheers


richard





On Jul 13, 12:07*pm, Clark wrote:
"~^ beancounter ~^" wrote in news:f3966a24-bd37-474a-
:

Takes care of the "yaw" factor, when a motor goes out, right?
I like to looks of the skymaster...But, for my profile, training, and
hrs in type...I am sticking to high performance, single engine
cessnas...


A 182 partnership was advertising on the BJC terminal building bulletin
board. I'm not lookin' for a 182 so I didn't pay a lot of attention but I
think they were selling 1/8ths for about 10K and they had a substantial
engine reserve in place.

--
---
there should be a "sig" here


 




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