Username Protected wrote:
Separately, you can't go to CYTZ in a jet.
With 4000 ft of runway, that's a policy problem, not a technical one. They ban jets for some reason there.
Under 3000 ft is doable, with weight reductions and care, but a turboprop is better suited to really short fields (though my MU2 really can't use fields shorter than my Citation).
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The relative simplicity of the TBM means I feel confident and proficient at operating the airplane.
What do you perceive is complex about Citation systems? Very few are affected by having two engines, and some are easier for having two.
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the used TBM market has held up very well, better than the used jet market as far as I can tell.
Nearly all well kept Citations have appreciated significantly in the last 5 years. I probably can sell mine for double what I paid. Since I paid less to buy it than a TBM typically would cost, I'm also less exposed to a market downturn.
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being based at KHPN, I'm often held to 8000 until leaving N90 airspace.
You can observe the altitudes of jets leaving KHPN to see what they get, which will generally be higher than turboprops. On arrivals, the altitudes for jets are usually above the turboprops, too.
For example, out of KHPN:
https://www.flightaware.com/live/flight ... /KHPN/KCHSFL430 in 27 minutes.
https://www.flightaware.com/live/flight ... /KHPN/KVRBFL400 in 22 minutes.
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Judging from the complaints of "slowtation" pilots, I don't expect ATC to be much kinder if I was in a legacy Citation.
They generally keep jets higher.
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My understanding is that this is a huge range and speed killer in jets.
Not really if not excessive. The time spent in a level off gaining speed is then converting to a high climb rate so you don't lose as much time to altitude as you would think, as the above examples show.
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The TBM has the flexibility to cruise in the high teens VFR if needed; in big winter headwinds it's sometimes the most efficient choice.
The turboprops go low for headwinds because they are slow.
The jets go high for headwinds because they are fast. The strategy is entirely different.
I once gained 50 knots groundspeed by climbing from FL430 to FL450 in a headwind.
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operating cost - probably not that different, but emotionally I had a hard time thinking that I was going to be paying a "jet tax" at every FBO for handling / overnights.
The "jet tax" isn't too bad, though it exists. Parking seems to be the biggest difference.
If you count the sunk cost of capital, then I think I am flying cheaper than you in my Citation V. In terms of direct operating cost, the TBM will be less mainly due to fuel.
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People talk about getting stuck in the weather with a FL310 ceiling but enroute weather has almost never been an issue for me.
Biggest benefit of higher is being able to see thunderstorms far more clearly visually. I don't like embedded storms where you rely solely on the radar.
A further advantage is that the jet is faster so you can take a longer diversion to go around things go any given increase in flight time. A 30 minute diversion can be 200 miles around something.
Mike C.