Roger Roger
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It behaves exactly how you’d expect a 10000 lb airplane with 1200 horses on the nose to behave. You have to be on the rudder and with all that inertia you have to be careful not to secondary stall it. Certainly as previously mentioned if you’re power on and pull through the pusher things could get exciting. But you know, you’re not supposed to do that. That’s kind of the point of training on stalls. Then again, if what I hear every year when I go through the schoolhouse is true, the standards out there in the pilot group aren’t exactly high. And that’s the people that actually go to sim training…I wouldn’t call any stall in the PC12 docile… Once it stalls it doesn’t want to fly again. Takes some finesse and like others have said, the torque from adding back that 1200 HP will put you right back into a stall. Been 5 years since I’ve flown it but I do remember stalling it would be quite undesirable.
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