01 May 2025, 15:22 [ UTC - 5; DST ]
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Post subject: Re: Beechcraft versus Cirrus: No wonder they have a parachute! Posted: 04 Mar 2010, 21:46 |
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Joined: 02/13/10 Posts: 20195 Post Likes: +24825 Location: Castle Rock, Colorado
Aircraft: Prior C310,BE33,SR22
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Username Protected wrote: They match certain professional licenses with the FAA pilot license records to filter out easy marks. This is all stuff you can buy from places like wellpoint. Hmmmm. I have a certain professional license and an FAA pilot license -- I feel so left out! 
_________________ Arlen Get your motor runnin' Head out on the highway - Mars Bonfire
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Post subject: Re: Beechcraft versus Cirrus: No wonder they have a parachute! Posted: 04 Mar 2010, 22:08 |
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Joined: 05/08/09 Posts: 7203 Post Likes: +4689 Location: Stuart, FL (KSUA)
Aircraft: 1967 Bonanza V35
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Regarding idiot pilots. I'm not willing to castigate any specific group of owners / operators. Rather, it seems to me to be a generic type of pilot, brand independent. I believe it's the training and/or awareness of the pilot that's to blame.
As I sit here and read these examples of bone-headedness, I wonder how and when I learned right from wrong. Things like prop blast courtesy or traffic pattern decorum.
I "grew up" in a flying club. Lots of 18 to 20-something flyers. The social competition was fierce. The weak were culled from the elite pretty darn quick. Any screw up at the field was eagerly pointed out by all the other kids, and God forbid, by one of the older mentors. You only made a mistake ONCE!
Today, the club houses have been replaced with barbed wire fences. Security badges instead of old ratty couches. The whole environment had changed. And so with it, the atmosphere. The peer and camaraderie atmosphere has gone. It's now hurry up, do your business efficiently, and leave. The new flyer today is the guy wealthy enough to buy into today's aviation. Today's ab inito student has probably learned a life of "time matters" and "me first". And perhaps that's related to the issues we see becoming more frequent.
Hopefully places like Beechtalk will serve as the new clubhouses to teach neophytes the rules of the road.
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Post subject: Re: Beechcraft versus Cirrus: No wonder they have a parachute! Posted: 04 Mar 2010, 22:11 |
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Joined: 08/03/08 Posts: 16153 Post Likes: +8866 Location: 2W5
Aircraft: A36
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Username Protected wrote: Hopefully places like Beechtalk will serve as the new clubhouses to teach neophytes the rules of the road. Lol, considering some of the recent shouting matches, that sounds about right.
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Post subject: Re: Beechcraft versus Cirrus: No wonder they have a parachute! Posted: 04 Mar 2010, 23:31 |
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Joined: 09/13/08 Posts: 2418 Post Likes: +648 Location: Bakersfield, CA
Aircraft: 260B Comanche
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Username Protected wrote: I've never been able to understand why so many pilots of other types of airplanes try to find negative things to say about the Cirrus. All of these anecdotes about allegedly bad Cirrus pilot behavior, the unfounded claims of "failed" FAA spin testing, reciting accident locations and rumors, and just general negatively slanted statements...... what is it that drives all this? If you have the plane you love, that's great. I have mine, too. However, there are thousands of Cirrus owners who feel just as much love toward their planes as the Bonanza and Baron owners here feel toward theirs. They make the same mistakes, have the same types of crashes, fly into the same bad weather, and do the same stupid pilot tricks.......no matter which type of airplane they have. I say: enjoy the plane you have, but life is too short to be going around bashing fellow pilots and plane owners. Let's all just get over it. Sheeeeesh!   I call BS to this. Arlen, I was heavily invested in the plane that used to get beat up by Cirrus drivers. By this I mean it was like a child which more or less made me an over protective mother. Regardless, spending every hour when I wasn't at work or sleeping for 3 1/2 years in my garage building my airplane brought with it a bond or attachment that left me very protective of it. I did become cognizant to the fact that every time I leaped from our booth in an airport restaurant to run to the rescue there was a Cirrus beating up my airplane out on the ramp. If you haven't experienced this good on you. Playing the PC card will not change the fact that I have experienced this, and also that the trend has been verified with hanger blastings. I'll continue to scream this from the rooftop of my hanger if I choose. Sheeeeesh!  I was curious if others had noticed this. If not, that's a good thing. Maybe these were somehow local in nature or aimed at RV's for some reason which would make the bad behavior intentional. This I don't believe though. I think it was just poor judgement.
Last edited on 04 Mar 2010, 23:37, edited 1 time in total.
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Post subject: Re: Beechcraft versus Cirrus: No wonder they have a parachute! Posted: 04 Mar 2010, 23:37 |
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Joined: 12/09/07 Posts: 17116 Post Likes: +13050 Location: Cascade, ID (U70)
Aircraft: C182
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Bryan,
Many Cirrus owners buy the plane as their first.
Many of them have very little experience in flying.
Many of them don't care anything about flying, but consider the Cirrus a "flying car," and they don't get into airport talk, spend time with other pilots, or learn the etiquette of ground operations.
Clearly, some Cirrus pilots are very good, very experienced, and very considerate. It's just that the way the plane were marketed, it attracted a lot of buyers who didn't know anything about flying.
This *may* contribute to the experiences you had.
_________________ "Great photo! You must have a really good camera."
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Post subject: Re: Beechcraft versus Cirrus: No wonder they have a parachute! Posted: 04 Mar 2010, 23:40 |
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Joined: 12/09/07 Posts: 17116 Post Likes: +13050 Location: Cascade, ID (U70)
Aircraft: C182
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Username Protected wrote: Hopefully places like Beechtalk will serve as the new clubhouses to teach neophytes the rules of the road. I am a neophyte. What are the rules?[/quote] Remember that the wind made by the big fan on the front of your plane goes behind you. Know what is behind you. Your prop wash can damage airplanes. It can ding very expensive paint jobs. It can make a mess (throw dirt and grime into them) of open hangars. Be aware of where the tail of your plane is pointed. If you are parked on a line of planes, give the engine a shot of power to get it moving, but before you turn (thus pointing your prop wash at others), pull the power all the way back and coast around the turn. Apply power when you are pointed parallel to the line of planes. Just one item, for starters. All of us with planes on the ramp thank you for asking.
_________________ "Great photo! You must have a really good camera."
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Post subject: Re: Beechcraft versus Cirrus: No wonder they have a parachute! Posted: 04 Mar 2010, 23:40 |
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Joined: 09/13/08 Posts: 2418 Post Likes: +648 Location: Bakersfield, CA
Aircraft: 260B Comanche
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Username Protected wrote: Bryan,
Many Cirrus owners buy the plane as their first.
Many of them have very little experience in flying.
Many of them don't care anything about flying, but consider the Cirrus a "flying car," and they don't get into airport talk, spend time with other pilots, or learn the etiquette of ground operations.
Clearly, some Cirrus pilots are very good, very experienced, and very considerate. It's just that the way the plane were marketed, it attracted a lot of buyers who didn't know anything about flying.
This *may* contribute to the experiences you had. You are probably right. In fact your response makes a lot of sense.
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Post subject: Re: Beechcraft versus Cirrus: No wonder they have a parachute! Posted: 05 Mar 2010, 00:29 |
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Joined: 06/16/08 Posts: 3566 Post Likes: +264 Location: San Rafael, CA (KDVO)
Aircraft: 1979 Bonanza A36TC
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Username Protected wrote: Regarding idiot pilots. I'm not willing to castigate any specific group of owners / operators. Rather, it seems to me to be a generic type of pilot, brand independent. I believe it's the training and/or awareness of the pilot that's to blame.
As I sit here and read these examples of bone-headedness, I wonder how and when I learned right from wrong. Things like prop blast courtesy or traffic pattern decorum.
I "grew up" in a flying club. Lots of 18 to 20-something flyers. The social competition was fierce. The weak were culled from the elite pretty darn quick. Any screw up at the field was eagerly pointed out by all the other kids, and God forbid, by one of the older mentors. You only made a mistake ONCE!
Today, the club houses have been replaced with barbed wire fences. Security badges instead of old ratty couches. The whole environment had changed. And so with it, the atmosphere. The peer and camaraderie atmosphere has gone. It's now hurry up, do your business efficiently, and leave. The new flyer today is the guy wealthy enough to buy into today's aviation. Today's ab inito student has probably learned a life of "time matters" and "me first". And perhaps that's related to the issues we see becoming more frequent.
Hopefully places like Beechtalk will serve as the new clubhouses to teach neophytes the rules of the road. Absolutely Nail hit on the head right there
_________________ Past 12: IPC/BFR, Spins/Upset, WINGSx2, ASFx2
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Post subject: Re: Beechcraft versus Cirrus: No wonder they have a parachute! Posted: 05 Mar 2010, 00:34 |
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Joined: 02/13/10 Posts: 20195 Post Likes: +24825 Location: Castle Rock, Colorado
Aircraft: Prior C310,BE33,SR22
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Username Protected wrote:  I call BS to this. Arlen, I was heavily invested in the plane that used to get beat up by Cirrus drivers. By this I mean it was like a child which more or less made me an over protective mother. . Bryan, I'm sorry if I struck a nerve here, and sorry that anyone treated you and your plane that way. Inexcusable...
_________________ Arlen Get your motor runnin' Head out on the highway - Mars Bonfire
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Post subject: Re: Beechcraft versus Cirrus: No wonder they have a parachute! Posted: 05 Mar 2010, 12:58 |
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Joined: 09/13/08 Posts: 2418 Post Likes: +648 Location: Bakersfield, CA
Aircraft: 260B Comanche
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Username Protected wrote:  I call BS to this. Arlen, I was heavily invested in the plane that used to get beat up by Cirrus drivers. By this I mean it was like a child which more or less made me an over protective mother. . Bryan, I'm sorry if I struck a nerve here, and sorry that anyone treated you and your plane that way. Inexcusable...
No worries Arlen, and thanks. I've been thinking about this topic a bit since yesterday and I'm really inclined to think that Tom is on to something. FWIW, I do have my head screwed on tight enough to realize that the few incidents that I've experienced can't represent significant behaviour patterns or be enough to typecast anybody. I'm just really curious why the most extreme examples that I've personally witnessed of bad form on an airport have this commonality?
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Post subject: Re: Beechcraft versus Cirrus: No wonder they have a parachute! Posted: 05 Mar 2010, 14:30 |
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Joined: 02/14/08 Posts: 3133 Post Likes: +2672 Location: KGBR
Aircraft: D50
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I wasn't looking to notice jerky Cirrus drivers, I just noticed jerks and then noted that they all were driving Cirrus.
But I certainly agree that snowboarders are just too scared to ski like men.
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Post subject: Re: Beechcraft versus Cirrus: No wonder they have a parachute! Posted: 05 Mar 2010, 21:26 |
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Joined: 03/11/08 Posts: 474 Post Likes: +183
Aircraft: PA28-161
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The reason I don't snowboard is after all those dues I paid on two boards, I don't want to have to repeat it on one. Otherwise, I'd probaly be a boarder who thinks skiers are hopelessly mired in the past.
Steve Chatfield Short hair, long skis, steam guages,_ _ _
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