Thunder-Robo
Well-Known Member
woohooo! Let's buy a new fleet of A/C just for the ppl students!
okay, i know they're no where close... so.... carry on.
okay, i know they're no where close... so.... carry on.
What are they looking at, for those of us that are not at UND? If I were a student, I'd be totally happy at the prospective of having something cheaper to fly, because then its cheaper to get ratings in.
DA-20 (non-LSA), Cessna Skycatcher, Piper Sport, Glasair (maybe), and one more, not sure of the name, but it as winglets that look like airbus.
DA-20 (non-LSA), Cessna Skycatcher, Piper Sport, Glasair (maybe), and one more, not sure of the name, but it as winglets that look like airbus.
All of those sound like a better deal than flying a 172. Personally, I think its a good idea to have various planes in the training fleet, in order to allow students to get experience to different airplanes. Nothing worse than having a guy that has a total of 275 hours, with it in 2 planes, 172 and PA28R. Get experience in a bunch of things, in order to work on the basic skills more.
I'll be interested to see what UND thinks of the Rotax, seeing as it powers 2 of those 5 listed.
Actually I think 102 in the light sports, jumping up to 221 in the Cessna's would be a good jump, with the Arrow going away, right now the first jump is from the Cessna to the Seminole, a pretty big jump for someone who has never done a jump before, and the LSA might make it a little easier since they've already had the experience of going up to a little more airplane.
Well the Diamond guys know a thing or two about cold weather ops, eh?
Having flown a DA-20 on a day that was right about 10 degree's, it was awesome once you got the thing running. Solo, full fuel, I was getting crazy performance (almost 140 KIAS). Sun was out, and it got toasty in the cabin in a hurry, even without using the heater.
140!!!! I did my training in a DA-20 C1 and never saw more than 125 ever! You sure your not stretching that a TINY bit![]()
The winter tests will be the deal sealer. That is what has limited the fleet options in the past. There was a period of time where UND had some TB9s or TB10, I don't remember which (probably the TB9), when Cessna stopped making trainers a while back. They weren't a big success because they didn't have interior insulation. It was just bare metal and it frosted up inside. On the plus side, you could scrape the frost off and make a sno-cone :rawk:
The only good training thing about the CT is the chute.....