Up to 12 of your best friends flying 180kts to some remote island sounds like a good idea to me.
http://www.dornierseaplane.com/

Probably old news... but still cool!

52Romeo wrote:Low Rider,, could you land that seaplane on the lake,,at Lake Tahoe ??
low rider wrote:52Romeo wrote:Low Rider,, could you land that seaplane on the lake,,at Lake Tahoe ??
All day long,,,,,,do you mean with the high elevation or is Tahoe open to seaplanes.?

FloatFlyer wrote:Great idea. Take your 12 good buds and have them each kick in $500,000 each and they could become 1/12th owner of a Seastar!!!And each of them are alloted about 250 pounds each for them and booze, food, etc. Sounds pretty good.
mountainmatt wrote:Saw it on the cover of Flying and thought "that's cool".
Up to 12 of your best friends flying 180kts to some remote island sounds like a good idea to me.![]()
http://www.dornierseaplane.com/
Probably old news... but still cool!
150Mike wrote:FloatFlyer wrote:Great idea. Take your 12 good buds and have them each kick in $500,000 each and they could become 1/12th owner of a Seastar!!!And each of them are alloted about 250 pounds each for them and booze, food, etc. Sounds pretty good.
When I ran the numbers for the Seastar, after putting someone in each seat, there was only enough useful load left over to carry fuel to fly for about 150 miles. Pretty short legs!
Haven't heard so much as a "peep" of new information or news about it in almost 2 years. (going on 3 years now!) I wonder if they're actually making any progress on new production up there in Montreal.
hotrod150 wrote:There's a guy at my airport who tells me he's involved with this Dornier seaplane project. I don't know if he is gonna be a (or the) US sales rep or just what. I believe it is currently undergoing certification, no doubt a long drawn-out process.
Apparently Dornier had plans early-on to introduce an LSA seaplane, but the design outgrew LSA limitations in pretty short order.
I hate to say it, but talking to this guy it sounds like the old expression about making a small fortune in aviation by starting out with a large one might be applicable to this endeavor. Is there really enough market for this aircraft to cover design & certification costs, let alone any profit?
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