mtv wrote:
Oh man, those big Wip amphibs are HUGE! And HEAVY! The 206 I was talking about was on 3450 Wip amphibs, which are also legal at 3800 on a G.
The purpose of that airplane was survey work. Never carried more than two, no back seats. No worries if anything singing a skin cause there was rarely anything other than a couple duffles in back. Not a very practical plane for most, but.
The articulating seats are really heavy. I don’t recall the weight difference to plain seats, but it was quite a lot. Those seats were done with confor foam and were very comfortable. I learned to hate the damn roll pins in those articulating seats anyway.
I’d go to straight seats in a heartbeat.
MTV
Yup! I wish I had the 3450's, but what a hefty price for them!. I'd also like to have the water support you have up there here, then I'd could certainly go with straight floats. Down here in Chile you are on your own when you're not on an airfield, and then some. Aerocet's are getting good reps and are not that expensive, time will tell what I'll do with those 4000s, given the chance.
My articulating seats were weighted at 24.1 lbs about 26 years ago, so they might as well be well over that by now with dirt and all that disgusting stuff that tends to reside in them. I am about to go for a new interior and I'll evaluate going to fixed seats. As I've read here in other topics, most of us seem to find the sweet spot and never adjust them again anyway, and if not, height-cushions could do for a new pax. It seems a reasonable thing to do if I'll be shedding some 15-20 pounds of non-diet weight. I'd like a solid structure though, and I tend to think of light seats as a bit flimsy ones, here is when all your experiences in this forum comes very handy.
The second row seats weighted then 14.8 lbs each, and the third row ones made it at 9.8 lbs each.
@A1Skinner, I can´t find your post, do you have a link? Seems definitely interesting