Hi guys,
I'm a student trying to design a bush aircraft for 5-6 passengers. I was just wondering whether I should have single or twin engines?
What are the advantages and disadvantages of these two configuarations? WHat would you guys suggest?
b26 wrote:Hi guys,
I'm a student trying to design a bush aircraft for 5-6 passengers. I was just wondering whether I should have single or twin engines?
What are the advantages and disadvantages of these two configuarations? WHat would you guys suggest?

WWhunter wrote:Rather long video but the Kodiak landing is within the first couple of minutes. The takeoff is at the 25 minute mark and it is equally spectacular. The yellow cones are NOT at any specific distance but you can still get a rough idea of the short takeoff distance.
http://www.youtube.com/watch?v=u0kq-qQX ... e=youtu.be

This here, in so many words, is exactly what I was going to say. CapnMike is a mind reader. Understand though, that if a Turbine Beaver was a viable new commercial product, dehavilland would be making them. The Pilatus Porter IS in production and for a couple of million bucks you can buy one tomorrow.CapnMike wrote:b26 wrote:Hi guys,
I'm a student trying to design a bush aircraft for 5-6 passengers. I was just wondering whether I should have single or twin engines?
What are the advantages and disadvantages of these two configuarations? WHat would you guys suggest?
I would go with a single engine turbine. It's hard to beat the power to weight ratio of a Pratt and Whitney PT6, as well as the reliability of the engine itself and the ease of operation across a wide temperature range. For 5-6 passengers, it becomes harder to justify twin engines, and the structure of the airplane is necessarily larger to support the extra engine.
If you look at the airplanes that have been most successful in the bush, you're going to see that they generally share certain characteristics. The DeHavilland Beaver, turbine Beaver and Turbine Otter are all legendary bush planes - all "taildraggers", high-wing, and with single, tractor-mounted engines (engine mounted in front, rather than rear-mounted pusher). <various snips>
For the 5-6 passenger range, with their gear, it would be hard to beat a turbine Beaver clone.
mtv wrote:WWhunter wrote:Rather long video but the Kodiak landing is within the first couple of minutes. The takeoff is at the 25 minute mark and it is equally spectacular. The yellow cones are NOT at any specific distance but you can still get a rough idea of the short takeoff distance.
http://www.youtube.com/watch?v=u0kq-qQX ... e=youtu.be
It's always fun to fly an airplane like this with reverse. Makes short landings pretty impressive, when done right.
MTV
EZFlap wrote:Another thing to consider is where your "bush" flying is, and the terrain under you, and the distance to the next town. Two engines gives you two chances to get home in the event of engine problems, of course at the cost of the extra engine, structure, etc. as mentioned.
mtv wrote:
And, while Pilatus will build you a Turbine Porter, you have to special order it...they don't build them in normal production.
and were mostly talking about the PC12.Users browsing this forum: No registered users and 0 guests