Patrick
Well-Known Member
Damn that is sick. The 55 is a dog, probably more than the 45. I would love to fly the 75.
I never liked the 55. Flies nice enough once you get into the air, but man are they a runway hog.
Damn that is sick. The 55 is a dog, probably more than the 45. I would love to fly the 75.
I could google it, but I'll just ask. Does the 70 series have a comparable power/weight ratio to the 60?Hopefully, the 70's are what the 60 should have been. Great engines, etc, but give it some new landing gear and wings so you can reach your true potential...
True. I've flown all the Lears except the 40/45, have always heard good things about them, but have never really heard how the climb performance is (compared to the other Lears). Just wondering.My understanding is that the 70/75 is an evolution of the 40/45 (narrow tube), and are pretty much unrelated to the 55/60 (fatter tube).
As such, the 70/75 has some upgrades to systems, avionics, and even more power, so should be a real dream.
I haven't flown the 60, but my understanding is that it is more of a rocket ship than the 70, but not nearly as well-rounded an aircraft.
60:
9,200 pounds thrust
23,500 pounds max take-off weight
0.392 ratio
70:
7,700 pounds thrust
21,500 pounds max take-off weight
0.358 ratio
Our's are numbers 3 and 6, I believe.
We were doing 6k/min through fl200, 2k/min though fl400, the thing is a beast. Long live turbo jets.As far as Lears go, nothing will beat the straight jet 24/25 vertically. I've only got about 10 hours in a 25, but it climbed like hell.
I'm totally jealous. Been flying the 45xr for the lat 5 years. The 75 looks to be what will make a good airplane great. It's kinda sad when our ipad has a better moving map than the airplane.
As far as Lears go, nothing will beat the straight jet 24/25 vertically. I've only got about 10 hours in a 25, but it climbed like hell. We took off vfr out of EL Centro one day. We were through 12k down wind abeam mid field. Doing about 9-10k fpm. The 45xr is a very well balanced airplane. When you're light you can still get pretty decent climb rates as well. We had a maint flight yesterday and got to FL430 in about twenty minutes with some level offs. On the way down with just spoilers I got it to 8500fpm. 430 to 12k in under 4min 30sec.
As far as Lears go, nothing will beat the straight jet 24/25 vertically.
Mmmmm 28/29. There's one for sale in Medford, OR.If you liked a 24/25 you'd love one of these with the -8 engines.
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Yes. I've got time in a 25, and vertically, it's an absolute rocket. A 28/29 would be very cool to add to the bucket list.If you liked a 24/25 you'd love one of these with the -8 engines.
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They're going bye-bye in 2015, unless the operators opt for the hush-kits.Lear 23/24/25 is on my bucket-list. I guess I'd better hurry, since I can't imagine that many are RVSM'd, and I'd imagine they have a range of about 30 miles at FL270. But hey, you get there in about two minutes! Just glide to the landing!
They'll also come down like a greased manhole cover. Pretty close to 1:1. We were 45 miles out of SUN at either 410 or 430, I forget, but we still made the airport. Empty of course.Lear 23/24/25 is on my bucket-list. I guess I'd better hurry, since I can't imagine that many are RVSM'd, and I'd imagine they have a range of about 30 miles at FL270. But hey, you get there in about two minutes! Just glide to the landing!