Username Protected wrote:
Wait, what? SR22 easiest plane to fly. Didn’t they have to come up with special training much like the MU2 because guys were killing themselves in Cirrus planes?
The wing stalls and you can’t recover. You need a chute because of the horrible wing design. But you say it’s the easiest to fly? Come on.
Mike
Mike, I've flown at least 80 different types of planes, from Grumman AA1's to Cheyenne 400's, and the Cirrus is no different that most. It is easy to fly, it doesn't really stall, it just mushes like a Cherokee, but, it is fully controllable due to the outboard wing cuffs. Unlike most others, which stall abruptly, or drop a wing, like all single engine Cessnas ever built.
The "special" Cirrus training is 90 percent on the advanced avionics systems that few competing airplanes have.
There are plenty of safe and successful Cirrus pilots that have started from scratch in brand new SR22T planes. I personally know at least six who have done it in the last eight years.
The wing stalls and you can't recover? Absolute nonsense. The chute is not a band aid for poor handling, it is a safety device added as part of the design due to the Alan Klapmeier's experience of a mid air collision, as told by Dale Klapmeier:
"In 1985 my brother Alan had a mid-air collision. The other airplane’s wing was severed from the fuselage and the pilot tragically died in the crash. Alan’s airplane lost a big chunk of its wing, including half of the aileron, making it almost impossible to control. He was able to get it back to the airport by keeping the speed very high – about 140 KIAS – and using full aileron deflection, but even with that configuration he was still in a turn at touchdown."
In fact, the Cirrus has been tested to prove its' spin resistant characteristics, it was demonstrated to be fully recoverable using conventional techniques.
"The FAA also determined, as stated in the ELOS, that the probability of high altitude loss of control is very
low. In the event that control is lost, the CAPS system provides an effective means to protect the occupants.
The departure resistance aspects of the ELOS are primary, but the presence of the CAPS system is an
additional risk mitigating feature due to its ability to recover the aircraft in less than 1000 feet.
In its presentation to the JAA Sectorial Team on February 26, 2003, the FAA re-stated its philosophy. The
primary focus is to prevent departure from controlled flight / spin entry, through three aspects.
• First, the FAA found that the enhanced stall handling characteristics are based on the intent of the spin
resistance requirements.
• Second, the FAA found that the improved departure resistance addresses the real issue driving the
accident rate – inadvertent departure from controlled flight – and that this supports the US Department
Of Transportation’s safety mandate.
• Third, the FAA concluded that the Cirrus wing treatment and handling characteristics are parallel to
NASA research.
The FAA’s secondary focus of addressing these accidents is the low altitude departure recovery being possible
using the CAPS system, The FAA noted that the CAPS system recovers the airplane in the same or less
altitude than airplanes in the same class take to recover from the one-turn spin requirement of sec. 23.221. The
FAA saw the stall handling characteristics providing the ability to recover from a stall without losing control
or entering a spin, and the CAPS system as a second line of defense. "
https://www.peter2000.co.uk/aviation/mi ... report.pdf