Sierra Victor wrote:Only complaint I have about my 206 is it burns the wrong fuel.
Piston aircraft engines suck.
akaviator wrote:Sierra Victor wrote:Only complaint I have about my 206 is it burns the wrong fuel.
Piston aircraft engines suck.
Suck, compress, burn, and blow right?
Turbines use more fuel to produce the same amount of horsepower and that fuel is heavier, as well as being a lot more $$$. For us low flying folks that fly light a piston engine is really a wonderful thing. At least in my ever so humble opinion.
dogpilot wrote:I had the co-pilot door on the Soloy 206. It came with it, I didn't have to pay for it. It is rather hurtful in its pricing. Sure is nice to be able to let folks in on their own side. It also does make operating on floats a bit easier than climbing over the nose to get to the other float. It just you can also almost afford another airplane for its price.
Sierra Victor wrote:Yes, but I look at it also from a safety standpoint. I often fly w wife and two kids and in an emergency there’s really only one useable egress point. Getting the back doors open would be difficult especially for kids. Post crash fires give me nightmares!!!
That's why I bought a P model. Can't get quite as big of stuff in, but man I like the copilot door. And they are cheaper...Sierra Victor wrote:dogpilot wrote:I had the co-pilot door on the Soloy 206. It came with it, I didn't have to pay for it. It is rather hurtful in its pricing. Sure is nice to be able to let folks in on their own side. It also does make operating on floats a bit easier than climbing over the nose to get to the other float. It just you can also almost afford another airplane for its price.
Yes, but I look at it also from a safety standpoint. I often fly w wife and two kids and in an emergency there’s really only one useable egress point. Getting the back doors open would be difficult especially for kids.
Post crash fires give me nightmares!!!
CAVU wrote:Sierra Victor wrote:Yes, but I look at it also from a safety standpoint. I often fly w wife and two kids and in an emergency there’s really only one useable egress point. Getting the back doors open would be difficult especially for kids. Post crash fires give me nightmares!!!
Teach them on the ground how to get the rear door all of the way open with the flaps down and explain that you may have them do this while you're flying if the engine quits--but to wait for your instruction.
As long as they understand how to do this, the 206 isn't the worst for egress. Upside down under water is going to be tough for any airplane, and the 206 is no exception. But if you have an engine failure in flight they can get that rear door all of the way open before you land. It's a morbid way to start a sightseeing flight, but I do it anyway.
On a happier note, this thread makes me feel better about the money I'm about to dump into my F model.
CAVU
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