Username Protected wrote:
Richard Collins, the oracle of IFR from Flying magazine...
Collins also remarked on how few times he had hit the "boot inflate" switch in anger. Something along the lines of, he could "count on the fingers of both hands"? That in a lifetime of flying the P210.
That said, I fly a FIKI 600. First thing I did when I bought it was install the inboard boots and engine compartment ice screens. It already had hot props and alcohol windshield. (The dozen or so Piper 700s were the only planes with direct-from-the-factory FIKI option. Any other FIKI AEST, like all the other 700s, is an a la carte retrofit.)
Other than $300 for the occasional quart of Agemaster, the system requires negligible maintenance. The hot props seem to require the most attention -- the contacts and slip rings needing adjustment.
And yeah, despite flying all year round in the NE and Great Lakes, I've only hit inflate a handful of times. Even so, no way am I giving up FIKI. I remember what it was like picking up ice in the Mooney before the Aerostar with radar and deice.
There are plenty of owners who use their AEST recreationally and that's fine. Even VFR it's the most fun you can have with your pants on. But if you want to use it for serious cross-country flying it makes sense to buy one equipped for the mission.
If you think finding a deiced 700 is hard, try finding a clean low time 600.