I haven't flown it, but form an ATC perspective. It goes forward or up, not both at the same time.![]()
Always an arse in every bunch. Anyone with any useful to add, a pilot at least?![]()
Always an arse in every bunch. Anyone with any useful to add, a pilot at least?![]()
I hear it has the same motors as the A-10...
You're going to operate it like a turboprop. Indicated speeds in the 220-230 range aren't unheard of in the upper 20's and lower 30's with a good tailwind on days 1-3.
It's fine. You'd hold at 225 right? Look at LRC charts. Those are used for diverts. It's purely a fuel savings thing.Uh...we try not to get below 250 in the upper 20s. If you can't do that, get lower.
I believe they are similar but slightly different
Not sayin' anything about how you fly it. But the slowest I've ever flown the CRJ 200 is 250/.70. If it's a high temp deviation day, I'll request a slow climb, but never speed less than 250/.70. Maybe this is just the SkyWest way, and I don't know any better. The engineers designed it to do a 290/.70 climb, but company usually assigns an econ-climb speed slower than 290.You're going to operate it like a turboprop. Indicated speeds in the 220-230 range aren't unheard of in the upper 20's and lower 30's with a good tailwind on days 1-3.
The engines are CF34's. CF stands for commercial fan, as I understand. It is a derivative of the A-10 engine, with almost the exact same performance. But I have no proof. This is what they told us in ground school.I hear it has the same motors as the A-10...
Are you thinking about going to a regional? Just curious.Interesting. The T-45A/C Goshawk, small light jet had an underpowered motor. We would always climb at 300KIAS above 10k but above 20K, it was a pig. Shot of fuel solenoid limiting fuel didn't help but that was during power addition anyway. It was a cock weak jet above 20k..that's what 5,527lbs of thrust at sea level gets you with a plane that weighs over 10k lbs.
The engines are CF34's. CF stands for commercial fan, as I understand. It is a derivative of the A-10 engine, with almost the exact same performance. But I have no proof. This is what they told us in ground school.
Are you thinking about going to a regional? Just curious.