Be careful in that frigging ice. I've never flown one, but I've been on the same frequency with people who were and were pooping their pampers more than once.
I just had a couple new hires come back from their initial training. While the ground training remains the same, the sim portion isn't what it used to be. This of course is due to the loss of all D level caravan sims in the crash. The staff at FSI is great and they're doing what they can to accommodate us and provide the best training possible with the equipment they have left.
I just had a couple new hires come back from their initial training. While the ground training remains the same, the sim portion isn't what it used to be. This of course is due to the loss of all D level caravan sims in the crash. The staff at FSI is great and they're doing what they can to accommodate us and provide the best training possible with the equipment they have left.
I've not gotten into the gnarly stuff yet, but word on the street is if you strap a couple hundred extra ponies on the front (like, say, a #tpe331 #flatprops) it does as well as any other booted airplane.Be careful in that frigging ice. I've never flown one, but I've been on the same frequency with people who were and were pooping their pampers more than once.
EAAASY plane to fly. Like said above. Its a 182 with less levers to mess with.
Only thing that drives me nuts is the fuel buzzer when a tank is off. Scares the crap outta me every time.
I've not gotten into the gnarly stuff yet, but word on the street is if you strap a couple hundred extra ponies on the front (like, say, a #tpe331 #flatprops) it does as well as any other booted airplane.
I actually don't agree with most of the comments above, yeah maybe the Caravan may look feel like a big 182/206 with a turbine engine...but in my own experience it doesn't really fly like one. From my experience it flies like a medium size twin.
Maybe it's not in South America, but I assure you that it is very much IFR certified in the US.Well, not sure about other conversions with the garret, but the Supervan is not IFR certified.
We have two of them.
I actually don't agree with most of the comments above, yeah maybe the Caravan may look feel like a big 182/206 with a turbine engine...but in my own experience it doesn't really fly like one. From my experience it flies like a medium size twin: it is fairly stable, it needs runway and speed, reduction of power creates a lot of drag and you don't want to fly it anywhere near stall speed.
Many say it is very easy to fly, honestly what makes an aircraft easy or hard is the environment it is flown in, the type of weather, the terrain and the airports you operate to and from.
because it is actually a very limited bush airplane,
Correct sir. If they were building a bush plane from the start they would have given it a lot more grunt. 675 hp isn't a lot on an airplane that grosses out at 9000 lbs. The various up engine options do a lot to address that issue but I don't know how they do in reality as we don't really do any legit bush flying.While many people think of the 208 as a bush plane, it was never designed to be one. It will fly in and out of almost any GA airstrip in the US but when you start talking about 1500' grass strips of off airport ops, the Caravan was never designed to go there.
Eh... It's a big Cessna. Flies the same as any other fixed gear high wing Cessna product. I agree that it is stable, but it doesn't need much runway, and airspeed in only an issue when it comes icing season. As far as flying near stall speed... I'll fly a Caravan as slow as it will go any day of the week over some medium sized twins.
The Caravan is easy to fly. Heck, almost any airplane is easy to fly... just look how little time new pilots have when they solo for the first time.
The procedures and challenges of different environments, weather, terrain, and airports are become difficult... not the flying of the airplane.