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Johnm
17th Mar 2013, 14:05
Does anyone know of an aircraft with up to 40 seats that can operate (probably not fully laden) out 1000metres of runway? Something with performance and capacity between a Twotter and a Saab 340 is the expected answer, I haven't found one despite a fair bit of searching.

Phileas Fogg
17th Mar 2013, 15:07
DHC7 (50 seats) but there ain't many around.

Johnm
17th Mar 2013, 15:11
I agree and if someone can find an aircraft bigger than a 340 that can operate out of 1000 metres I'll be a bit suprised:)

Phileas Fogg
17th Mar 2013, 15:22
DHC7? .....

Johnm
17th Mar 2013, 15:27
I think it's the only one but as you say obsolescent and rare

Phileas Fogg
17th Mar 2013, 15:40
OK then, the earlier versions of the DHC8 ... Are you a bit surprised yet? :)

Johnm
17th Mar 2013, 15:42
Now I'm surprised:) I would have expected about 1200 metres for a Dash 8

chevvron
17th Mar 2013, 15:57
Junkers Ju52

Phileas Fogg
17th Mar 2013, 16:00
Only after they stretched the DHC8 did it need more runway, the early DHC8's seated 36 or more and could do it from a 3,000ft runway.

Johnm
17th Mar 2013, 16:12
Chevvron is having a laugh I assume, but they did use Herons and Doves into the 1960s as it happens.........

Phileas Fogg
17th Mar 2013, 16:28
Get on to Air France, one of these would do the job :)

http://upload.wikimedia.org/wikipedia/commons/e/ec/Air_France_Aviation_Postale_Transall_C-160P_Haafke-1.jpg

con-pilot
17th Mar 2013, 16:50
Turbine powered DC-3?

Don't know if you can get 40 passenger seats in one however.

siftydog
17th Mar 2013, 18:10
HS Andover. 40 something pax, a couple still operating in Africa I think.

xtypeman
17th Mar 2013, 18:22
ATR 42 the -300 operated off Plymouth with reasonable load better than the Dash 8 upto 40 pax to DUB and full load to CWL.

munster
17th Mar 2013, 22:48
44 passengers, No runway required.Model 234 Chinook (http://www.boeing.com/boeing/history/boeing/m234.page)

bpilot52
22nd Jun 2014, 12:30
HS Andover C1 is the correct answer. :p Doing STOL (not perf A) with water meth injection we could use 1000 FEET. Anguilla was - if I remember right - about 750 ft of tarmac with a baked mud over-run. I usually stopped on the tarmac full of metropolitan police with baggage and beer to keep them going.
6 degree approach and full reverse before touchdown. :ok:

bpilot52
23rd Jun 2014, 10:18
Hi Jenkins :)
No. Turned on the strip ok.
The narrow one was Barbuda. Just 18 inches outside each mainwheel and a deep shoulder to the runway. Open the back door/ and talk sweetly to the loadmaster. Then, as you know, it was all or nothing reverse to return to the threshold for t/o. Runway was long for us -cannot remember exactly - maybe 2500ft but with the narrow width that produced a very odd approach :eek: feeling much higher than we really were. B

skerry
25th Jun 2014, 07:38
The Antonov An-72/74 would do the job...though it carries more than forty pax. Upper Surface Blowing and the Coanda effect, lovely aeroplane.

Agaricus bisporus
25th Jun 2014, 13:59
44 passengers, No runway required.Model 234 Chinook

Far from requiring "no runway" a laden BV234 actually required more runway than the Dash8 on t/o iirc. Unst could be limiting!

Munster, helicopter performance is not quite as simple as you imagine it to be...