Friday, November 6, 2009

RE: Light-Sport Aircraft Yahoo group Re: Skycatcher news



I will verify that, since I trained in one for my license. Finding the last one under the cowl is mind boggling at first. If you have done it, you know what I mean. It is a favorite for the checkride to show them all. When done with all the fuel slung out there I am surprised the thing doesn't blow up during the first misfire on startup. All the adjustable seats I have seen in the fleet, only about half work. Most are either stuck or won't lock without efforts being made and you can't get in or out without pushing the seat back two feet. That is why I bought what I did. See what you started Helen..?  :-)
 
Cessna seems to have lost a chance to be poster girl of the AOPA give away. They give us a plane from China and then AOPA selects a Remos G3 for the poster.
 
Unemployment at 10.2% today with 190,000 listed unemployed. Doesn't make sense. There has to be more than that, I would think.
 

Gary Orpe

-----Original Message-----
From: Sport_Aircraft@yahoogroups.com [mailto:Sport_Aircraft@yahoogroups.com] On Behalf Of Helen Woods
Sent: Friday, November 06, 2009 8:16 AM
To: Sport_Aircraft@yahoogroups.com
Subject: Re: Light-Sport Aircraft Yahoo group Re: Skycatcher news

 

Yes. There are 5 sumps under each wing and 3 under the nose.

1968 Cessna seats were designed to bend forward and backward. If yours
don't, I suggest you have them serviced.

I have a good deal of time behind an IO-360 and I haven't found one yet
that was easy to start when hot.

As a Cessna owner and card carrying member of Cessna Pilots Association,
I think I have earned the right to gripe about what the current company
has done to what was once an excellent line of planes. The 50's and
60's planes were awesome but they've gone down hill from there,
especially after the break in the production line in the late 80's due
to lawsuits. I am guessing that is why you and I both own 1960's
Cessna's and not modern ones.

Helen

Rick Pitcher wrote:
>
>
> 13 fuel sumps just so the lawyers can't prove that you checked them
> all for water? Really? The checklist only shows the normal wing tank
> and fuel strainer. Are you saying there are MORE of these sumps? Where?
> http://www.scribd.com/doc/903694/Cessna-172-SP-Checklist
>
> And the seats don't bend so you can reach things in the back seat? My
> 1968 172i seats don't bend either, do the seaats in your older 172
> bend? wierd...
>
> The fuel injected engines refuse to start when warm? Funny, the 3
> 172SP's at EAFB flying club all seem to start and run OK when warm, so
> do all the other fuel injected engines that I see fueling up next to
> me at the fuel pumps.
>
> And the useful load on the SP is still around 850 pounds, same as my
> 1968 172i. How much does your 172 carry?
>
> I know that you are selling other airplanes, but it just seems little
> disengenuous to pick nits on everyone else's airplanes.
>
>
>
> ----- Original Message -----
> *From:* Helen Woods <mailto:Helen_Woods@verizon.net>
> *To:* Sport_Aircraft@yahoogroups.com
> <mailto:Sport_Aircraft@yahoogroups.com>
> *Sent:* Friday, November 06, 2009 7:25 AM
> *Subject:* Re: Light-Sport Aircraft Yahoo group Re: Skycatcher news
>
>
>
> The 13 fuel sumps for one so the lawyers can't possibly prove that
> the
> pilot checked all of them for water. The fuel injected engine that
> refuses to start when hot to prevent law suits from pilots who don't
> know how to identify and resolve carburetor ice. The giant super
> heavy
> seats that won't bend so you can reach anything in the back that you
> might need in flight but presumably prevent wiplash lawsuits for
> another. I could go on. They've added so much lawyer proofing on
> their
> current 172 that its so heavy as to be a two person bird.
>
> Helen
>
> Rick Pitcher wrote:
> > ----- Original Message -----
> > From: Helen Woods
> > To: Sport_Aircraft@yahoogroups.com
> <mailto:Sport_Aircraft%40yahoogroups.com>
> > Sent: Friday, November 06, 2009 5:32 AM
> > Subject: Re: Light-Sport Aircraft Yahoo group Re: Skycatcher news
> >
> >
> >
> >
> >> You know, one thing that no one has talked about that is going
> to be
> >> really interesting is what type of service Cessna is going to
> provide to
> >> owners looking for LOAs. Since the restart of the Cessna
> production
> >> line in the 90s, Cessna has been hyper concerned about
> liability, often
> >> to the design detriment of their aircraft. A quick comparison of a
> >> C172SP against any P or earlier model of C172 illustrates what
> I mean.
> >>
> > I> can easily see them refusing to offer any sort of LOAs or
> modification
> >
> >> support to owners.
> >>
> >
> > That's an odd sounding statement, what does it mean?
> > What kind of design detriments did they make for liability purposes?
> >
> >
> > ------------------------------------
> >
> > Yahoo! Groups Links
> >
> >
> >
> >
> >
> >
>
> ----------------------------------------------------------
>
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>



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