April 9, 20188 yr This will be a Must Buy for me, as I've flown in a V-Tail under VFR and IFR. A good friend had one. And yes, it can fly like a warbird. My plane of choice now is the Carenado V-Tail, which is Exactly like the one I've flown in. I hope they have the wood panel and chrome. Edited April 9, 20188 yr by denali Disclaimer: [email protected] on Asus Maximus X Formula, G.Skill TridentZ RGB 4x8GB 4266/17 XMP, EVGA 2080 ti Kingpin (8400/2160Mhz), Samsung 960 EVO 250GB PCIe M.2 NVMe SSD , 28TB HDD total - 4TB+ photoscenery, Romex Software PrimoCache RAM and SSD cache (must have!), 3x1080p 30" monitors, Samsung Odyssey VR HMD, Pimax 4k & BE HMDs, Samsung Gear VR '17, Homdio v1, Cardboard, custom loop 2x 360x64ML Rads, Thermaltake View 71, VRM watercool, Thermal Grizzly Conductonaut CPU (naked die), Fujipoly / ModRight Ultra Extreme System Builder Thermal Pad on MB VRM. 8x Corsair ML120 (slight positive pressure). 🙂
April 9, 20188 yr 16 hours ago, DJJose said: The "V-tail doctor killer" due to its unstable lateral axis. The downward force is non existent on this airplane and it's unforgiving. Mess up on this one and it could be the last time you mess up. I thought Mooneys were the Doctor Killers? Disclaimer: [email protected] on Asus Maximus X Formula, G.Skill TridentZ RGB 4x8GB 4266/17 XMP, EVGA 2080 ti Kingpin (8400/2160Mhz), Samsung 960 EVO 250GB PCIe M.2 NVMe SSD , 28TB HDD total - 4TB+ photoscenery, Romex Software PrimoCache RAM and SSD cache (must have!), 3x1080p 30" monitors, Samsung Odyssey VR HMD, Pimax 4k & BE HMDs, Samsung Gear VR '17, Homdio v1, Cardboard, custom loop 2x 360x64ML Rads, Thermaltake View 71, VRM watercool, Thermal Grizzly Conductonaut CPU (naked die), Fujipoly / ModRight Ultra Extreme System Builder Thermal Pad on MB VRM. 8x Corsair ML120 (slight positive pressure). 🙂
April 9, 20188 yr Richard Collins, stated this in an article published in Air Facts in 2012. Pretty much sums it up! "The airplane had light and delightful control forces and while it was stable in pitch it was less so in roll. If a pilot was going to hand-fly in clouds he had to be both good and attentive. Left to its own devices, a V-tail would be in a spiral dive in a heartbeat. A VFR pilot in clouds was almost autodead." Cheers Martin
April 9, 20188 yr 15 minutes ago, MartinRex007 said: Richard Collins, stated this in an article published in Air Facts in 2012. Pretty much sums it up! "The airplane had light and delightful control forces and while it was stable in pitch it was less so in roll. If a pilot was going to hand-fly in clouds he had to be both good and attentive. Left to its own devices, a V-tail would be in a spiral dive in a heartbeat. A VFR pilot in clouds was almost autodead." Cheers Martin Good thing when it happened to me I was in the Cherokee! i7-6700k • Gigabyte GA-Z170X-UD5 • 32GB DDR4 2666 • EVGA FTW ULTRA RTX3080 12GB
April 9, 20188 yr 5 hours ago, denali said: I thought Mooneys were the Doctor Killers? I dont think so, iirc from my GA days I thought it was Bonanzas that were the "Dr Killer"... I have been seriously thinking about getting back into GA (I owned a M20J for a few years) and started investigating B35 ownership (need to make sure I can find a good plane for my budget), I am really looking forward to A2A release of this wonderful aircraft! John
April 10, 20188 yr The V-tail certainly has some unique handling characteristics, but as much as anything the rep came from it being a desirable, high-performance step-up plane that was often being purchased by users with more money than flight-time and training. And of course the V-tail just naturally lent itself to the ominous sounding sobriquet of "fork-tailed". Thus the "Fork-tailed Dr. Killer" legend was born. I ended up purchasing my Piper Turbo Arrow IV from an MD who was selling it to buy a V35, but many were making a far bigger jump when they bought their V-tails. I'm also very-much interested in what A2A does with this one. I have the Carenado with the "optional" Bernt Stolle FDE which isn't bad, but it's dated at best and I rarely fly it. My first hour of logged instruction came in a V35B. The owner was a casual friend and CFI who knew I was about to jump into training so he offered to take me up and give me some initial flight instruction in his plane before I started my program with a local flight school. Sure made the 152s I finished my training in seem slow, small and primitive. Say what you will about the V-tail, but the V35's handling will put a smile on almost anyone's face. If A2A can come close to duplicating that feel, I'll be a happy simmer. Scott
April 10, 20188 yr Author On 4/8/2018 at 6:55 PM, jabloomf1230 said: I never flew one, but I remember it was nicknamed the "Doctor Killer" because if its flight characteristics. It's an interesting choice on the part of A2A. CG is affected by how the pilot loads the aircraft. A forward cg is better than an aft cg. You will have a hard time flaring properly or recovering from a stall if you don't load within the specified cg limits. Either way the airplane becomes less stable, but because you're dealing with a v-tail, it's even more dangerous. Edited April 10, 20188 yr by DJJose MSFS
April 10, 20188 yr Thanks. I'm looking forward to the A2A version as it seems like the V tail has some interesting characteristics.
September 15, 20187 yr Since I'm a P3dv4-Professional owner I've decided not to purchase the A2A Bonanza. 😞 I Earned My Spurs in Vietnam
September 15, 20187 yr 21 minutes ago, Bluestar said: Since I'm a P3dv4-Professional owner I've decided not to purchase the A2A Bonanza. 😞 And why is that? They do offer a "Professional" version. 32GB DDR4 3200Mhz i7-9700K RTX 3060 12GB GDDR6
September 16, 20187 yr Moderator Opening up an old thread just to announce you are not going to buy it is a waste of time. locked Vic RIG#1 - I9 14900K MSI Pro z790 RTX 5070Ti 40" 4K Monitor 3840x2160
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