22 Dec 2025, 19:32 [ UTC - 5; DST ]
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Post subject: Re: Cirrus SF50 Posted: 13 Dec 2018, 09:35 |
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Joined: 11/03/08 Posts: 16989 Post Likes: +28898 Location: Peachtree City GA / Stoke-On-Trent UK
Aircraft: A33
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Username Protected wrote: So a manufacturer can purchase two PW610f motors to install on a new airplane for the same price as one FJ33? especially when the FJ33 is likely to be made in qty while the pratt 610 is married to a failed airframe manufacturer
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Post subject: Re: Cirrus SF50 Posted: 13 Dec 2018, 09:38 |
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Joined: 01/29/08 Posts: 26338 Post Likes: +13087 Location: Walterboro, SC. KRBW
Aircraft: PC12NG
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Username Protected wrote: So a manufacturer can purchase two PW610f motors to install on a new airplane for the same price as one FJ33? especially when the FJ33 is likely to be made in qty while the pratt 610 is married to a failed airframe manufacturer Is that a yes or no?
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Post subject: Re: Cirrus SF50 Posted: 13 Dec 2018, 09:43 |
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Joined: 11/03/08 Posts: 16989 Post Likes: +28898 Location: Peachtree City GA / Stoke-On-Trent UK
Aircraft: A33
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Username Protected wrote: Is that a yes or no? for clarity, I'm squarely in the "no" camp A lycoming O-320 vs an IO-720 - sure one is more expensive than 2 of the other 2 small turbine engines, no way Now consider that the alleged cheaper flavor will always be a low-volume oddball.
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Post subject: Re: Cirrus SF50 Posted: 13 Dec 2018, 10:14 |
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Joined: 08/03/08 Posts: 16155 Post Likes: +8872 Location: 2W5
Aircraft: A36
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Username Protected wrote: Conklin and de Decker disagree with Mike's contention that two jets are cheaper than one. This table gives their hourly operating costs for the SF50 and many other turbines. They say the SF50 costs significantly less per hour than any of the twinjets, including the Eclipse with Mike's beloved PW610s. The SF50 also comes in cheaper than most turboprops, including the TBM and Pilatus. Other than the unpressurized Caravan and Kodiak, only the Piper Ms and Extra 500 are cheaper per hour than the SF50. https://www.aopa.org/news-and-media/all ... ting-costsBut what do they know 
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Post subject: Re: Cirrus SF50 Posted: 13 Dec 2018, 10:35 |
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Joined: 01/11/10 Posts: 3833 Post Likes: +4140 Location: (KADS) Dallas, TX
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By the logic suggested here a B-36 with 6 turning and 4 burning should be the cheapest possible aircraft to operate, the turbine equivalent of a 172. You can even go a few years over TBO if you don't mind risking the dreaded 9 engine approach.
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Post subject: Re: Cirrus SF50 Posted: 13 Dec 2018, 17:52 |
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Joined: 03/28/17 Posts: 9041 Post Likes: +11475 Location: N. California
Aircraft: C-182
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Username Protected wrote: Did our grandfathers feel the same way about seatbelts in cars.... Do the seatbelts require the driver the slow down to 20 MPH and have the steering wheel straight before they restrain you? Do the seatbelts require the driver to activate them? If both of those were true, seatbelts would save almost no one they do today. If the chute actually covered more than a trifle of the flight envelope, then it would be more of an argument, but the SF-50 chute is so severely limited that if you are in the chute envelope, you actually aren't in much danger. Mike C.
Saying that if you're in the chute envelope, you actually aren't in much danger disregards the terrain and obstacles present when the plane contacts the earth. There's no question that settling into an area of rough terrain and obstructions under a chute is far more survivable that hitting them horizontally, even at stall speed.
Jets have a restart flight envelope they must be in in order to use the restart procedure, just like the SF 50 has an envelope to be in for chute use, in both cases the pilot puts the plane in that envelope before using the procedure when possible.
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Post subject: Re: Cirrus SF50 Posted: 13 Dec 2018, 18:38 |
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Joined: 11/30/10 Posts: 4404 Post Likes: +3978
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Quote: Jets have a restart flight envelope knowing that its not easy to do a restart at altitude; I wonder what the procedure is for the SF50? What is the highest altitude recommended? How does this compare to the optimal Chute altitude? BTW, what is the best glide speed and range for the SF50? (starting to sound like Monte Python in the background. "Bring Forth the Holy Hand Grenade of Antioch!" Reading from the Holy Book of Armaments, Chapter 7, Verse 2.).
_________________ An Engineer's job is to say No. Until the check clears, then make a mountain from a molehill.
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Post subject: Re: Cirrus SF50 Posted: 13 Dec 2018, 18:55 |
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Joined: 03/28/17 Posts: 9041 Post Likes: +11475 Location: N. California
Aircraft: C-182
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Username Protected wrote: Quote: Jets have a restart flight envelope knowing that its not easy to do a restart at altitude; I wonder what the procedure is for the SF50? What is the highest altitude recommended? How does this compare to the optimal Chute altitude? BTW, what is the best glide speed and range for the SF50? (starting to sound like Monte Python in the background. "Bring Forth the Holy Hand Grenade of Antioch!" Reading from the Holy Book of Armaments, Chapter 7, Verse 2.). I don't have the SF 50 AFM, but it probably has a restart envelope pretty close to its FL280 service ceiling. The planes I flew with Pratts had a restart envelope of about 25,000, and drifting down from normal cruise altitudes of 350 to 390 was always necessary to attempt a restart. The Williams engines may have totally different characteristics, but another question would be what is the minimum speed for windmilling to keep the engine-driven accessories functioning.
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Post subject: Re: Cirrus SF50 Posted: 13 Dec 2018, 22:46 |
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Joined: 12/10/07 Posts: 36218 Post Likes: +14553 Location: Minneapolis, MN (KFCM)
Aircraft: 1970 Baron B55
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Username Protected wrote: Unlike others here, I expect to fly till I am unable. As a result of this mentality, I expect the chance that I have an inflight medical event which prevents me from adequately flying the jet is greater than the turbofan experiencing a failure.
Yeah, yeah, I know this has not happened yet (where pilot pulled due to medical incapacitation). However, the baby bombers are just starting to get to the age where the odds are increasing for some type of incapacitating event; and with BasicMed allowing more of them to stay in the air, the odds are increasing the likely occurrence of these types of events.
The reason I would want the the chute, is less concern about me, more about the people on the ground. Ideally, I would want a fairly bright system with auto-descent and land if pilot fails to land. If unable to land, pull the chute and save the people on the ground.
Tim I believe that the technology exists today to equip almost any jet or turboprop with the ability to navigate to and land at a suitable airport in an emergency (engine failure at altitude or pilot incapacitation) and I suspect that functionality would be less expensive initially and long term as well as considerably lighter than a whole airframe parachute. Probably more effective as well.
_________________ -lance
It's easier to fool people than to convince them that they have been fooled.
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Post subject: Re: Cirrus SF50 Posted: 13 Dec 2018, 22:56 |
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Joined: 11/06/10 Posts: 12198 Post Likes: +3086 Company: Looking Location: Outside Boston, or some hotel somewhere
Aircraft: None
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Username Protected wrote: Unlike others here, I expect to fly till I am unable. As a result of this mentality, I expect the chance that I have an inflight medical event which prevents me from adequately flying the jet is greater than the turbofan experiencing a failure.
Yeah, yeah, I know this has not happened yet (where pilot pulled due to medical incapacitation). However, the baby bombers are just starting to get to the age where the odds are increasing for some type of incapacitating event; and with BasicMed allowing more of them to stay in the air, the odds are increasing the likely occurrence of these types of events.
The reason I would want the the chute, is less concern about me, more about the people on the ground. Ideally, I would want a fairly bright system with auto-descent and land if pilot fails to land. If unable to land, pull the chute and save the people on the ground.
Tim I believe that the technology exists today to equip almost any jet or turboprop with the ability to navigate to and land at a suitable airport in an emergency (engine failure at altitude or pilot incapacitation) and I suspect that functionality would be less expensive initially and long term as well as considerably lighter than a whole airframe parachute. Probably more effective as well.
Agree, but I think the FAA would certify and accept a parachute first. The whole what if analysis if no runway is within available range....
Tim
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Post subject: Re: Cirrus SF50 Posted: 13 Dec 2018, 23:08 |
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Joined: 01/31/09 Posts: 5193 Post Likes: +3038 Location: Northern NJ
Aircraft: SR22;CJ2+;C510
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Username Protected wrote: I don't have the SF 50 AFM, but it probably has a restart envelope pretty close to its FL280 service ceiling. The planes I flew with Pratts had a restart envelope of about 25,000, and drifting down from normal cruise altitudes of 350 to 390 was always necessary to attempt a restart.
The Williams engines may have totally different characteristics, but another question would be what is the minimum speed for windmilling to keep the engine-driven accessories functioning. Air restart envelope for the FJ33 is probably similar to the FJ44. You can use the starter or windmill start is above 230kts below 15K. With the FADEC in a windmill start you just move the throttle to cut off to reset the FADEC then back to idle. When over 230kts the engine should light off. Attachment: 0BDCC69F-051F-4EB5-BE50-F84EBF5F0A04.png
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_________________ Allen
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Post subject: Re: Cirrus SF50 Posted: 14 Dec 2018, 23:26 |
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Joined: 12/03/14 Posts: 20916 Post Likes: +26387 Company: Ciholas, Inc Location: KEHR
Aircraft: C560V
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Username Protected wrote: So a manufacturer can purchase two PW610f motors to install on a new airplane for the same price as one FJ33? OEM engine supply agreements are confidential, so you will never see verifiable proof of this. However, from the Eclipse bankruptcy documents filed during proceedings (sadly, no longer accessible online), the PWC agreement showed Eclipse was getting PW610F for about $280K each. A new FJ44-2A runs about $750K each. This is why a Williams conversion of a Citation 501SP is about $2.1M out the door, most of that is the engines. Correct for inflation, the rough price delta is about double per engine, or two PW610F is the cost of one FJ33-5A (which is just an FJ44 in reality, it is on the FJ44 TCDS). Further evidence is the sales price history of both the Eclipse and SF50 have been remarkably similar, so the second engine didn't affect the sales price very much. A single larger engine will cost more per unit for being larger, for having fewer units to amortize development costs over, for having higher liability to the engine manufacturer, and for having lower future revenue for service and major engine events. Engine makers ultimately make as much money if not more from future parts and service than they do from the initial purchase. Given 500 airframes of each type, would you rather be the engine OEM that supports 1000 engines on a twin or 500 engines on a single? For the twin, you sell twice as many engines, sell twice as many parts and service, and have basically zero liability. On the single, you sell half as many engines, sell half as many parts and service, and have a huge liability if the engine fails. Seems like a simply choice to me, and that's reflected in the price the OEM pays to get the engine. Mike C.
_________________ Email mikec (at) ciholas.com
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