So, anyone hear anything on what a 170 will (has) pack?
Just to be clear, Im not talking about packing ice inside
Feel free to send me a pm if not appropriate for posting.
Greg

roamak wrote:A 207? Not from what I hear. There is a reason its affectionately called a lead sled....
GumpAir wrote:A C207 will pack a shitload of ice and still fly. Don't ask me how I know.![]()
But bottom line, you DO NOT want to find out the answer to this question. I ain't scared of much in this world, and have done some really dumb things in airplanes, but ice is the only thing that had me sewing-machine-foot terrified while flying.
Bud Helmericks gave me the ice flying rule for single-engine Cessnas. Use up to full power to maintain airspeed and level flight in ice. UNTIL you hit eighty knots. From then on, you hold that eighty knots all the way to the ground.
Can't tell you the number of times I've come into OTZ or BRW with every knob on the panel shoved full forward holding that 80 KTS, praying for 15 more seconds flying time out of the wing. It's not a fun place to be.
Gump



mtv wrote:
I got a Super Cub iced up one day, on skis. White airplane, white skis, white everything. Came in to land in Bettles, and was going to hot dog it and fly it onto the groomed strip at high speed....just for fun. As I slowed through 70 mph, the bottom fell out and I landed. Fortunately, I was plenty low when it gave up, and it's a long strip.
Scary shit, airframe icing.
MTV
. At 10000 she just stopped flying and started to flutter down like a leaf. Did manage to get it on the ground at YXU, no forward visibility and close to an inch of ice covering the wing! Never Again!
GumpAir wrote:A C207 will pack a shitload of ice and still fly. Don't ask me how I know.![]()
But bottom line, you DO NOT want to find out the answer to this question. I ain't scared of much in this world, and have done some really dumb things in airplanes, but ice is the only thing that had me sewing-machine-foot terrified while flying.
Bud Helmericks gave me the ice flying rule for single-engine Cessnas. Use up to full power to maintain airspeed and level flight in ice. UNTIL you hit eighty knots. From then on, you hold that eighty knots all the way to the ground.
Can't tell you the number of times I've come into OTZ or BRW with every knob on the panel shoved full forward holding that 80 KTS, praying for 15 more seconds flying time out of the wing. It's not a fun place to be.
Gump
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