banner
banner

29 Jun 2025, 08:44 [ UTC - 5; DST ]


Garmin International (Banner)



Reply to topic  [ 151 posts ]  Go to page Previous  1 ... 6, 7, 8, 9, 10, 11  Next
Username Protected Message
 Post subject: Re: Jets with normal cruise of 0.7 mach or better?
PostPosted: 19 Oct 2022, 14:04 
Offline


User avatar
 WWW  Profile




Joined: 03/23/08
Posts: 7357
Post Likes: +4088
Company: AssuredPartners Aerospace Phx.
Location: KDVT, 46U
Aircraft: IAR823, LrJet, 240Z
Username Protected wrote:
TJ in my mind you are always right :)

Except in Culiacan... then Wendel is in charge :bow:

_________________
Tom Johnson-Az/Wy
AssuredPartners Aerospace Insurance
Tj.Johnson@AssuredPartners.com
C: 602-628-2701


Top

 Post subject: Re: Jets with normal cruise of 0.7 mach or better?
PostPosted: 19 Oct 2022, 16:17 
Offline


 WWW  Profile




Joined: 12/03/14
Posts: 20395
Post Likes: +25580
Company: Ciholas, Inc
Location: KEHR
Aircraft: C560V
Username Protected wrote:
Lear door sucks compared to the Mighty Mu2 door (best door ever?)

Agreed.

My Citation door seems like a toy compared to the MU2 door. And on the other side of it is FL450. Hmmm. Yet the service history is decently good for the Citation door. But you better believe I check the little green flags every time!

Mike C.

_________________
Email mikec (at) ciholas.com


Top

 Post subject: Re: Jets with normal cruise of 0.7 mach or better?
PostPosted: 19 Oct 2022, 17:01 
Offline


User avatar
 Profile




Joined: 12/19/09
Posts: 343
Post Likes: +294
Company: Premier Bone and Joint
Location: Wyoming
Aircraft: BE90,HUSK,MU-2
I lost the front right windshield at FL260. Sounded like someone discharged a shotgun next to me. Definitely a lot of shock value, made worse by the fact that the 300kt wind made the remaining fragments vibrate like a reed instrument…sounded like the end. Plane slowed with throttle back pretty fast and the vibration stopped. Then declared and made my descent. I did ultimately decide to reach for my mask because I figured I should, but I was so high on adrenaline that I never felt any light headedness so I never put it on as the plane came down like an anvil. I’ve also tried 20min at FL210 off oxygen in a Cessna 210, felt a little “off” on math and technical challenges presented by my airline pilot brother (who remained on oxygen) but definitely still functional.
At the high 30’s and low 40’s it’s a whole different ball game. Lungs work in reverse. Shock and expanding gas causes exhalation. With the next breath you suck in unoxygenated air into your lungs. Hemoglobin in the blood dumps its oxygen at the lung and with the next heartbeat, the unoxygenated blood hits the brain and it’s “lights out.” That’s why even folks who can hold their breath for a few minutes are toast in seconds at altitude.
But at “most turboprop levels” it seems you have plenty of time. I am a 55yo skier/alpinist who lives at 7600 feet and exercises at 9-11K so that may have some bearing on how I feel in high cabins.

_________________
Thomas


Top

 Post subject: Re: Jets with normal cruise of 0.7 mach or better?
PostPosted: 20 Oct 2022, 07:58 
Offline


 Profile




Joined: 09/05/12
Posts: 693
Post Likes: +506
Location: Vero Beach, FL
Aircraft: C310R, E55P, H130T2
Just throwing this out there...have we considered a new thread called, "Jets with the best environmental systems and supplemental oxygen that can achieve 0.7 mach or better?"


Top

 Post subject: Re: Jets with normal cruise of 0.7 mach or better?
PostPosted: 20 Oct 2022, 10:53 
Offline


 WWW  Profile




Joined: 10/06/16
Posts: 116
Post Likes: +183
Location: Tucson, AZ (winter) & Brunswick, ME (summer)
Aircraft: T210, Aerostar 702P
... we could do that, but then the thread drift would lead us to tire ply count, or cabin window sunshades, or maybe rudder trim authority.


Top

 Post subject: Re: Jets with normal cruise of 0.7 mach or better?
PostPosted: 20 Oct 2022, 11:18 
Offline


User avatar
 WWW  Profile




Joined: 03/23/08
Posts: 7357
Post Likes: +4088
Company: AssuredPartners Aerospace Phx.
Location: KDVT, 46U
Aircraft: IAR823, LrJet, 240Z
Username Protected wrote:
... we could do that, but then the thread drift would lead us to tire ply count, or cabin window sunshades, or maybe rudder trim authority.

And the answer would STILL be Mu2 haha

_________________
Tom Johnson-Az/Wy
AssuredPartners Aerospace Insurance
Tj.Johnson@AssuredPartners.com
C: 602-628-2701


Top

 Post subject: Re: Jets with normal cruise of 0.7 mach or better?
PostPosted: 20 Oct 2022, 12:09 
Offline


 Profile




Joined: 04/24/18
Posts: 736
Post Likes: +359
Location: NYC
Aircraft: ISP Eagle II SR22 g2
Username Protected wrote:
I lost the front right windshield at FL260. Sounded like someone discharged a shotgun next to me. Definitely a lot of shock value, made worse by the fact that the 300kt wind….


Minor niggle. About 200 ias…


Top

 Post subject: Re: Jets with normal cruise of 0.7 mach or better?
PostPosted: 20 Oct 2022, 15:07 
Offline


 Profile




Joined: 01/17/21
Posts: 92
Post Likes: +42
Aircraft: C550
Still think about my MU2 . It’s an overbuilt tank . Great airplane .


Top

 Post subject: Re: Jets with normal cruise of 0.7 mach or better?
PostPosted: 20 Oct 2022, 17:06 
Offline


 WWW  Profile




Joined: 12/03/14
Posts: 20395
Post Likes: +25580
Company: Ciholas, Inc
Location: KEHR
Aircraft: C560V
Username Protected wrote:
Minor niggle. About 200 ias…

There is a big difference between 200 KIAS at 200 KTAS at sea level and 200 KIAS at 300 KTAS at altitude.

Any material in the air, such as debris, dust, shards, etc, are moving at 300 knots.

Mike C.

_________________
Email mikec (at) ciholas.com


Top

 Post subject: Re: Jets with normal cruise of 0.7 mach or better?
PostPosted: 20 Oct 2022, 17:28 
Offline


User avatar
 Profile




Joined: 05/17/10
Posts: 4008
Post Likes: +2030
Location: canuck
Aircraft: x23mouse
How a British Airways pilot was sucked out of the cockpit at 23,000ft 30 years ago – and a flight attendant CAUGHT him
https://www.thesun.co.uk/travel/1320938 ... ow-broken/

_________________
nightwatch...


Top

 Post subject: Re: Jets with normal cruise of 0.7 mach or better?
PostPosted: 20 Oct 2022, 18:34 
Offline


 Profile




Joined: 04/24/18
Posts: 736
Post Likes: +359
Location: NYC
Aircraft: ISP Eagle II SR22 g2
Username Protected wrote:
Minor niggle. About 200 ias…

There is a big difference between 200 KIAS at 200 KTAS at sea level and 200 KIAS at 300 KTAS at altitude.

Any material in the air, such as debris, dust, shards, etc, are moving at 300 knots.

Mike C.


His post was about the 300kt WIND. No mention of flying objects or particles.

Top

 Post subject: Re: Jets with normal cruise of 0.7 mach or better?
PostPosted: 21 Oct 2022, 12:16 
Offline


User avatar
 Profile




Joined: 01/29/09
Posts: 4761
Post Likes: +2470
Company: retired corporate mostly
Location: Chico,California KCIC/CL56
Aircraft: 1956 Champion 7EC
Quote:

My Citation door seems like a toy compared to the MU2 door.


On one of my earlier Citation trips as a co-pilot, when I closed the door, I was amazed that there was a gap that you could see through along the edge. The door seal fills it, but still... (1980 or so, may have been a I or a II)

_________________
Jeff

soloed in a land of Superhomers/1959 Cessna 150, retired with Proline 21/ CJ4.


Top

 Post subject: Re: Jets with normal cruise of 0.7 mach or better?
PostPosted: 21 Oct 2022, 13:25 
Offline


 WWW  Profile




Joined: 12/03/14
Posts: 20395
Post Likes: +25580
Company: Ciholas, Inc
Location: KEHR
Aircraft: C560V
Username Protected wrote:
On one of my earlier Citation trips as a co-pilot, when I closed the door, I was amazed that there was a gap that you could see through along the edge.

This is common, and it was normal on the MU2 to also see through the door crack.

You do not want the door seal rubbing on the frame during opening and closing. That wears it out and can also fold or set it in a bad position so it doesn't inflate properly.

Once air pressure is applied, the seal then inflates and makes pressure on the frame to form the seal.

On my door for the Citation V (which may not be true on earlier models and not true for the MU2), there is a secondary door seal.
Attachment:
citation-door-seal.png

The secondary door seal serves two purposes. First, when the plane is parked on the ramp, it seals the door against water ingress by being in contact with the frame. Or at least, that is the intention since it sometimes isn't achieved in practice. Second, should the primary door seal after you have been pressurized, then cabin pressure will keep the secondary seal in contact with the door frame and provides a backup seal. That's the curved part with the ribs.

The primary seal pushed the secondary seal into position, so you have to at least had the primary seal work initially to have the secondary seal do its job. If you get no primary seal, usually the secondary seal isn't helping either.

More than you want to know about Citation secondary seals:

[youtube]https://youtu.be/k15ZwcaSOkg[/youtube]

The gap between the seals and the door frame is controlled by applying Bondo to the frame. This is crude and one of the worst design features of the Citation. My Bondo has cracks in it and finding someone skilled in repairing or replacing it has been challenging. I have made small repairs to keep it airworthy for now, but a proper replacement it likely to be needed at some point. Textron service center wanted $10K to do it and I wasn't entirely confident they outcome would be awesome at that price. I sense I will be doing that someday myself, but perhaps someone reading this can suggest a shop for this work. Anyone?

Mike C.


Please login or Register for a free account via the link in the red bar above to download files.

_________________
Email mikec (at) ciholas.com


Top

 Post subject: Re: Jets with normal cruise of 0.7 mach or better?
PostPosted: 21 Oct 2022, 16:28 
Offline


User avatar
 Profile




Joined: 04/20/15
Posts: 654
Post Likes: +362
Location: KFAT
Mike

Interesting parallel here to the Epic. Some Epic LTs used bondo as filler and show cracking in the paint anywhere and everywhere it’s applied. The door area usually shows a lot of cracks.

The solution is to use minimal filler and change the material to “micro” rather than bondo. It tolerates temp changes and expansion/contraction better. Not sure it’s an approved alternate application for Citations

I have no experience with it and that’s all I’ve heard


Top

 Post subject: Re: Jets with normal cruise of 0.7 mach or better?
PostPosted: 21 Oct 2022, 17:12 
Offline


 Profile




Joined: 07/15/12
Posts: 150
Post Likes: +131
How thick is the body filler? Anything over 1/4" will crack over time. You could try some flexible body filler when you redo it, maybe that will keep it from cracking.


Top

Display posts from previous:  Sort by  
Reply to topic  [ 151 posts ]  Go to page Previous  1 ... 6, 7, 8, 9, 10, 11  Next



B-Kool (Top/Bottom Banner)

You cannot post new topics in this forum
You cannot reply to topics in this forum
You cannot edit your posts in this forum
You cannot delete your posts in this forum
You cannot post attachments in this forum

Jump to:  

Terms of Service | Forum FAQ | Contact Us

BeechTalk, LLC is the quintessential Beechcraft Owners & Pilots Group providing a forum for the discussion of technical, practical, and entertaining issues relating to all Beech aircraft. These include the Bonanza (both V-tail and straight-tail models), Baron, Debonair, Duke, Twin Bonanza, King Air, Sierra, Skipper, Sport, Sundowner, Musketeer, Travel Air, Starship, Queen Air, BeechJet, and Premier lines of airplanes, turboprops, and turbojets.

BeechTalk, LLC is not affiliated or endorsed by the Beechcraft Corporation, its subsidiaries, or affiliates. Beechcraft™, King Air™, and Travel Air™ are the registered trademarks of the Beechcraft Corporation.

Copyright© BeechTalk, LLC 2007-2025

.mcfarlane-85x50.png.
.ssv-85x50-2023-12-17.jpg.
.kingairnation-85x50.png.
.gallagher_85x50.jpg.
.centex-85x50.jpg.
.Wentworth_85x100.JPG.
.bullardaviation-85x50-2.jpg.
.wat-85x50.jpg.
.wilco-85x100.png.
.stanmusikame-85x50.jpg.
.boomerang-85x50-2023-12-17.png.
.geebee-85x50.jpg.
.SCA.jpg.
.blackhawk-85x100-2019-09-25.jpg.
.sierratrax-85x50.png.
.ABS-85x100.jpg.
.KingAirMaint85_50.png.
.rnp.85x50.png.
.aerox_85x100.png.
.MountainAirframe.jpg.
.saint-85x50.jpg.
.midwest2.jpg.
.headsetsetc_Small_85x50.jpg.
.ocraviation-85x50.png.
.KalAir_Black.jpg.
.AAI.jpg.
.concorde.jpg.
.tat-85x100.png.
.temple-85x100-2015-02-23.jpg.
.performanceaero-85x50.jpg.
.camguard.jpg.
.pdi-85x50.jpg.
.Latitude.jpg.
.holymicro-85x50.jpg.
.traceaviation-85x150.png.
.daytona.jpg.
.jandsaviation-85x50.jpg.
.b-kool-85x50.png.
.dbm.jpg.
.tempest.jpg.
.planelogix-85x100-2015-04-15.jpg.
.shortnnumbers-85x100.png.
.garmin-85x200-2021-11-22.jpg.
.Wingman 85x50.png.
.airmart-85x150.png.
.blackwell-85x50.png.
.kadex-85x50.jpg.
.bpt-85x50-2019-07-27.jpg.
.CiESVer2.jpg.
.aviationdesigndouble.jpg.
.Elite-85x50.png.
.jetacq-85x50.jpg.
.puremedical-85x200.jpg.