The moo-too killed so many people like that, the FAA hadda make an SFAR for it.
In Canada it requires a single pilot high performance type rating (I think - it's been a while)
so that should be the gate-keeper.
If no one will sign off the type rating, he's out of the game. If someone is willing to
sign off his type rating, well, I guess they're ok with committing murder for hire. Lots
of people out there like that.
Down here you need 1000TT for a type rating so that takes care of many of the suicidal wingnuts.
King Air Cheaper to Operate than Cessna 340?
-
- Posts: 953
- Joined: Thu Jan 16, 2020 3:24 am
It’s no longer under the SFAR, they moved it to whatever the FAA equivalent of the Standards is called. The reason being the FARs take an act of federal government to change, even if all you want to do is update them. I had a pending SFAR amendment sitting on my desk for years waiting for congress or whoever to OK it.
The MU-2 specific FAA rules really bring the training and currency standards mostly in line with what was already required in Canada. Amazingly the accident rate dropped overnight to about 1/20 of what it had been.
Still, I’m conflicted on the airplane itself. I really liked flying it and found it didn’t have any built-in bad habits, often saying anyone could fly one. On the other hand, it has zero forgiveness of lapses in attention so I recognize not everyone should fly one.
-
- Posts: 472
- Joined: Wed Apr 28, 2021 7:21 pm
- Location: Group W Bench
I would counter that its way less likely to have an engine issue with the turbines than the pistons. While each big event in the King air is expensive, the piston engines are going to be more of a death by thousand cuts costs, and in long run, equal out. Except you're getting better performance and mileage from the turbines. From a commercial operations perspective, pilots can do less harm to a pair of turbines, they're a bit more idiot proof. Getting cylinders for the Continental 520 is getting problematic these days and quality is poor on what's available. So if up time is a premium for you you'd be nuts to be trying to run a 340 for any sort of commercial enterprise. If you don't need the pressurization, you'd be better off with a 310 anyhow.
I mean if you're just buying a 340 to say you fly a twin, and its more of a hangar ornament, then yeah, the king air is going to be over kill expensive. If you're putting a lot of miles and hours on an airframe for serious use, well there's a reason you don't see many 340s in commercial service. Most of the guys I know who had 340s gave them up a while ago.
The details of my life are quite inconsequential...
-
- Posts: 823
- Joined: Thu Jan 16, 2020 3:16 am
So one minute I’m flying along, thinking about boobs or pizza, next thing you know, I wake up eating goop through a tube in my nose?Slick Goodlin wrote: ↑Thu Oct 20, 2022 5:36 pm
Still, I’m conflicted on the airplane itself. I really liked flying it and found it didn’t have any built-in bad habits, often saying anyone could fly one. On the other hand, it has zero forgiveness of lapses in attention so I recognize not everyone should fly one.
-
- Posts: 219
- Joined: Thu Jan 16, 2020 4:15 am
I thought the question was for a privately owned 340. But it isn't specified anywhere, so fair enough.Squaretail wrote: ↑Thu Oct 20, 2022 5:45 pmI would counter that its way less likely to have an engine issue with the turbines than the pistons. While each big event in the King air is expensive, the piston engines are going to be more of a death by thousand cuts costs, and in long run, equal out. Except you're getting better performance and mileage from the turbines. From a commercial operations perspective, pilots can do less harm to a pair of turbines, they're a bit more idiot proof. Getting cylinders for the Continental 520 is getting problematic these days and quality is poor on what's available. So if up time is a premium for you you'd be nuts to be trying to run a 340 for any sort of commercial enterprise. If you don't need the pressurization, you'd be better off with a 310 anyhow.
I mean if you're just buying a 340 to say you fly a twin, and its more of a hangar ornament, then yeah, the king air is going to be over kill expensive. If you're putting a lot of miles and hours on an airframe for serious use, well there's a reason you don't see many 340s in commercial service. Most of the guys I know who had 340s gave them up a while ago.
For a private plane, there is no 'long run', you might only fly it 100 hours a year, likely less.
Commercially a King Air might make sense yes.
-
- Posts: 823
- Joined: Thu Jan 16, 2020 3:16 am
100 hours a year used to be the point where owning could be less expensive than renting. Otherwise the fixed costs made it less expensive to rent.
-
- Posts: 211
- Joined: Tue Feb 02, 2021 11:05 pm
My buddy had a nice C340 for 15 years. He took care of it and total fixed ownership costs averaged out to 50K per year. Some years were cheaper but others were more costly…..then you put gas in it. Do the math on 36 gal/hr block fuel flow
-
- Posts: 953
- Joined: Thu Jan 16, 2020 3:24 am
Jeez I hope not.David MacRay wrote: ↑Fri Oct 21, 2022 12:09 amSo one minute I’m flying along, thinking about boobs or pizza, next thing you know, I wake up eating goop through a tube in my nose?
-
- Posts: 823
- Joined: Thu Jan 16, 2020 3:16 am
Me too, zero tolerance made it sound like, it’s just waiting for a chance to turtle and break apart.
-
- Similar Topics
- Replies
- Views
- Last post
-
- 1 Replies
- 5170 Views
-
Last post by Liquid_Charlie
-
- 0 Replies
- 1783 Views
-
Last post by Scudrunner
-
- 0 Replies
- 1734 Views
-
Last post by News