08 Nov 2025, 02:36 [ UTC - 5; DST ]
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Post subject: Re: Lancair IV-P Posted: 07 Aug 2014, 21:24 |
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Joined: 12/29/10 Posts: 1569 Post Likes: +523 Location: Houston, TX USA
Aircraft: Learjet
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It's a fun airplane to fly and offers a lot of speed for the $. It's a hot airplane, but isn't bad to handle provided you don't fly it into a thunderstorm or get slow in the pattern.
Insurance is pretty ridiculous, even for liability-only.
_________________ Destroyer of the world’s finest aircraft since 1985.
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Post subject: Re: Lancair IV-P Posted: 07 Aug 2014, 22:39 |
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Joined: 10/07/09 Posts: 64 Post Likes: +27
Aircraft: Baron 58
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Several years ago, a fellow in the hangar across from mine sold his TN Bonanza and got a Lancair. Had an extensive checkout with an experienced instructor - no cowboy. Seemed very happy with the plane but nervous when about to fly it.
Several months later he and his wife were killed in it; evidently picked up ice at a high altitude flying from Florida to the Northeast and augured in. Daytime in the summer.
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Post subject: Re: Lancair IV-P Posted: 08 Aug 2014, 06:21 |
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Joined: 05/15/12 Posts: 653 Post Likes: +74 Location: Atlanta, GA (KPDK)
Aircraft: 2008 Bonanza G36
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The experimental aircraft had far different handling than certified aircraft due to the FARs No requirements for minimum stall,speeds, spin recovery, bob weights on the elevators, aileron interconnects with the rudder,etc Many experimental aircraft may exceed the minimum FAR part 23 standards, so they are not inferior , just built different for a different mission The FARs spell out these requirements to build in a safety margin for us regular pilots of certified aircraft Some experimental pilots have the training to handle the really high performance aircraft like the Lancair I had a friend with a Legacy that had a clean stall speed of over 90 knots, it was very fast but a handful to handle The extra speed of the high performance experimental aircraft comes with less of a safety margin when they are flown like a certified aircraft ie without specialized training
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Post subject: Re: Lancair IV-P Posted: 08 Aug 2014, 08:05 |
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Joined: 08/25/13 Posts: 615 Post Likes: +128
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If you're looking for one, and want to buy one, go up for a test flight and check out the CHTs. Bet you they will be pushing 440 in climb if not higher. That right there is all I ever waned to know about Lancair IV-P. Piston engine on the verge of explosion combined with glide characteristics of a space shuttle. This is David Morss flying it, most of us are not David Morss. Look at the angle required to maintain airspeed. All in all, perfectly executed maneuver, instant pitch up to stop the engine from tearing itself off the firewall, then instant pitch down for speed. http://www.youtube.com/watch?v=t0txEC0Rhdg
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Post subject: Re: Lancair IV-P Posted: 08 Aug 2014, 10:25 |
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Joined: 03/09/11 Posts: 1770 Post Likes: +829 Company: Wings Insurance Location: Eden Prairie, MN / Scottsdale, AZ
Aircraft: 2016 Cirrus SR22 G5
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Username Protected wrote: Insurance is pretty ridiculous, even for liability-only. That it is indeed. You can insure 4X the hull insured value on a production SEL TP (Meridian, TBM etc) for the same annual hull premium that you will pay in a IVP turbine.
_________________ Tom Hauge Wings Insurance National Sales Director E-mail: thauge@wingsinsurance.com
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Post subject: Re: Lancair IV-P Posted: 08 Aug 2014, 10:48 |
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Joined: 12/19/08 Posts: 12160 Post Likes: +3545
Aircraft: C55
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Username Protected wrote: If you're looking for one, and want to buy one, go up for a test flight and check out the CHTs. Bet you they will be pushing 440 in climb if not higher. That right there is all I ever waned to know about Lancair IV-P. Piston engine on the verge of explosion combined with glide characteristics of a space shuttle. This is David Morss flying it, most of us are not David Morss. Look at the angle required to maintain airspeed. All in all, perfectly executed maneuver, instant pitch up to stop the engine from tearing itself off the firewall, then instant pitch down for speed. http://www.youtube.com/watch?v=t0txEC0RhdgExceptional piloting skills here. Not only a perfect landing - he followed the taxi lines off the runway.
_________________ The kid gets it all. Just plant us in the damn garden, next to the stupid lion.
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Post subject: Re: Lancair IV-P Posted: 08 Aug 2014, 10:57 |
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Joined: 06/18/12 Posts: 10252 Post Likes: +8074 Company: Revolutionary Realty Location: Coeurdalene, ID (KCOE)
Aircraft: 1954 Bonanza E35
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Been around them for years, incredible airplane, I fear flying in one with a stopped engine.
I am what I think is a good pilot, and flying one of those w/o an engine terrifies me. In the Bonanza I have, if I lose an engine, I think I can handle it, speed wise, and put myself in a position to land it in a field, on water, whatever, at a slow enough speed to save my own life, and anyone in the plane. In a IVP, when you lose that engine, you have no choice but to be screaming along in a hopeful glide into whatever is under you at way over 110-120 MPH, 90 knots in one w/no power & it'll probably come out from under you.
Like Todd said, "most of us are not David Morss". Truer words not spoken.
_________________ It's all a big conspiracy.....
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Post subject: Re: Lancair IV-P Posted: 08 Aug 2014, 11:54 |
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Joined: 10/17/12 Posts: 682 Post Likes: +581 Location: Ellijay,Ga (N Ga Mts)
Aircraft: Bonanza 35
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"A man has to know his own limitations" as noted by the famous philosopher Clint Eastwood
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