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maxus

From Beechcraft Duke B60 Can Jump???

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There is a turbine version of the Duke



It's called a King Air.



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If you bothered to read the website, you would see that it is possible to convert a Duke airframe to turbine power by bolting on Pratt & Whitney PT6A turboprop engines. This gives owner-operators King Air performance - and reliability - at a fraction of the cost of a King Air. Remember that a lot of small turboprop airplanes routinely fly with only one or two passengers.

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You could probably jump from a Beechcraft Duke, but I doubt you could afford the maintenance on its Lycoming TSIO-541 engines.
T stands for turbo-charged, one way to reduce time between overhauls.
S stands for super-charged, another way to reduce time between overhauls.
I stands for fuel-injection, another maintenance-intensive system.
O stands for opposed, as in horizontally-opposed, a reliable configuration.
541 means it is one of the larger piston engines built by Lycoming, meaning they are squeezing the maximum possible horsepower out of those six cylinders, which means you need a pilot who is very smooth on the throttles. Which means that those engines were never designed for skydiving. Instead,they were designed to cruise for three hours, then gently descend.

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If you bothered to read the website, you would see that it is possible to convert a Duke airframe to turbine power by bolting on Pratt & Whitney PT6A turboprop engines. This gives owner-operators King Air performance - and reliability - at a fraction of the cost of a King Air.




Maybe I should have added a smiley face and written it like this -

It's called a King Air :P

I did read the website, and strapping any PT6 to just about anything is cool as hell.

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This Plane You can buy for 130.000 $ In Poland



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In North America, US$130,000 will buy you a solid Cessna 206, with good paint and plenty of time remaining before the next engine overhaul. Cessna 206s are work-horses that burn less than half as much gasoline - as twins - and cost a fraction for maintenance.

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