ralphbrynard
New Member
Wondering if anyone here flies em regularly and wants to know what they think? Also, if you happen to be in DFW, could I bum a ride one of these days???????
I fly em. I like em. get in touch with your local sales/demo guy, they are happy to show off the airplane (and give you a ride).
Who wants to go in with me on an STC to toss a PT6 on one? ....or a Garrett. You know. For cool-factor.
I'm thinking like 800shp............
-mini

I have over 1200 hours in them. Love the plane.
The plane will not make you a bad pilot! People who are lazy and don't do their due diligence as a pilot, make bad pilots.
It's a great plane. However, for very good reasons the transition course is required to get the insurance.
-A.S>
It's a CYA thing for Cirrus...and a money maker to boot. Nothing more, nothing less.
I never understood the "requirement" for the transition course.
At the end of the day, it's got 3 wheels, 2 wings, a tail, and an engine. Not unlike every other single engine airplane out there.
It's a CYA thing for Cirrus...and a money maker to boot. Nothing more, nothing less.
REALLY? This statement is not quite accurate.
Unlike EVERY other production aircraft, the parachute is a requirement for certification. The stability of the aircraft in slow flight, stall, and spin recovery were so far out of the envelope that it could not be certified without the chute.
Not arguing that it's not a good plane but you have to compare apples to apples.
That is 100% factually false.
Cirruses have been spun for the JAA certification and recovered using normal recovery inputs.
I have about 100hr's dual given in them...PM me any ?'s you got.
don't shock cool the engine, and never run oversquare.
Or lean of peak.don't shock cool the engine, and never run oversquare.