Username Protected wrote:
The single pilot thing is a big deal for international. While I know people seem to fly to MX all the time with the waiver, it appears to only be legal within US air space. Flying to Central and South America technically off table too.
It is not entirely US only. The SPE language allows other jurisdictions to recognize it and a few do (like Bahamas). Canada I believe also allows it (and they have a single pilot STC as well).
But overall, SPE doesn't work internationally too well. If you are flying single pilot internationally, a part 23 airplane like a CJ3 wins.
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I have hired Piaggio pilots for flights and it made me realize contract pilots only work well if you can plan your flights and stick to a schedule. Airlining pilots in and out makes things extremely complicated.
"Chartering the human" is what I call it. I have a few SIC "hobos" who like to fly along as unpaid SIC pilots, so I end up flying crew about 60% of the time at no extra cost to me.
But if you would want 450 knots and 1900 nm range, buying a 2 crew airplane works and many of them are surprisingly affordable. If you want to radically change your 1900 nm missions, then a 2 crew airplane with long range does that and shaves 2 hours off a Cj3.
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The Ultra in theory has the 'same' range as the CJ3 (about 1800nm in still air) if you slow it down a little bit. That's what I really wanted to buy, outside of awful fuel burn, it fits the mission quite well and will be able to be full Garminized like your V soon.
The awful fuel burn is mitigated by the lack of an awful engine program cost.
The Garmin STC is said to be due by 2026, but it may be late. I wouldn't think it would be routine until 2028 to get it installed.
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I like the Encore+ w FADEC but it doesn't have the range - more fuel efficient but they seem to have cut fuel capacity (and added single point).
The full bleed wing reduced fuel capacity by 400 lbs, but the engines are more efficient so the range is pretty close to the V/Ultra, particularly if you fly it at the same speeds. The PW535A engine costs a lot to overhaul and the program prices are high (like $600/pair/hour).
Single point fueling started showing up in Ultras as an option. I don't find it compelling, adds weight, complexity, maintenance, and failure modes. I am happy I have 2 over the wing ports and no balance requirements (unlike the MU2).
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Interesting what you said about inspections, from what I can tell the CJ was less than the older Citations but maybe I don't understand all the Docs. They are overly complex in all versions IMO. Maint providers I have spoken with (WestStar) indicated CJ3 is less downtime by a good margin :shrug:
Westar has been known to be overly aggressive trying to make an old plane new again. I wouldn't assume their observations represent reality.
The SkywayMRO catalog provides a reference for costs.
https://skyway-mro.com/wp-content/uploa ... 024web.pdfThe big win on the legacy Citation is the LUMP extending phase 1-4 to 3 years, phase 1-5 to 6 years. The 525 doesn't have the same relief.
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My goal is to be able to fly 300 hours per year and only have one planned downtime of a week or two. That seems doable with CJ.
Inspections more often than 300 hours or 12 months for a CJ3 (from the SkywayMRO catalog):
Doc 19: Fire extinguishers (6 mo)
Doc 29: battery (100 hrs)
Doc 35: battery cap check (3 to 6 mo)
Doc 38: standby battery check (6 mo)
Doc 40: corrosion check (6 mo)
FJ44: check 1 (150 hrs)
FJ44: compressor wash (150 hrs)
It would be nice to have a local shop to do the above nuisance inspections.
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But my main mission is covering long distances mostly solo or with just an employee or two so I am attempting to optimize for that. Time will tell if that is a 'smart' decision...
If you are willing to do a fuel stop on the 1900 nm trip, there are a lot of planes available. M2, CJ2, 501 Stallion, etc.
IMO, selling the Piaggio to get a CJ3 is not enough of a change in performance to be satisfying. While the CJ3 will get you there maybe at most 1 hour faster on a 1900 nm mission, it makes up for it in fuel burn and cabin size.
If you get a 2 crew 450 knot class plane, that would be different.
Mike C.