King Air E90 assessment flight - any tips?
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King Air E90 assessment flight - any tips?
Afternoon all,
I have an assessment flight on a King Air E90 coming up soon, and having no experience on type I was hoping that you might be able to give me some advice, guidance or tips with regards to operating procedures, power settings in the circuit, general handling, single engine handling, any gotchas etc.
Many thanks,
OE
I have an assessment flight on a King Air E90 coming up soon, and having no experience on type I was hoping that you might be able to give me some advice, guidance or tips with regards to operating procedures, power settings in the circuit, general handling, single engine handling, any gotchas etc.
Many thanks,
OE
Join Date: Feb 2012
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In the circuit 600 lb-ft should be adequate at 2000 RPM. If you are keeping 2200 RPM (easier if you've no KA time, but noisy) back that off to maybe 550 lb-ft. Sounds low, but you'll be going plenty quick enough. You can actually reduce by 100 lb to give yourself more time and still be at a safe clean speed, but might get a gear warning (cancel with a button to the left of the lever, but cannot be cancelled with any flap out).
It's a King Air, doesn't have any gotchas! Lovely aircraft to fly, handles like a dream, climbs fine on one if clean. Does it have autofeather? It's an option on aircraft with 3-blade props, mandatory for 4-blade.
Oh, one oddity for someone unused to King Airs is flap retraction. Most won't retract unless set to full up (can't retract in stages, except by setting fully up, then selecting approach flap as it passes that point). Later ones change this, but I've only flown one E90 so not sure.
It's a King Air, doesn't have any gotchas! Lovely aircraft to fly, handles like a dream, climbs fine on one if clean. Does it have autofeather? It's an option on aircraft with 3-blade props, mandatory for 4-blade.
Oh, one oddity for someone unused to King Airs is flap retraction. Most won't retract unless set to full up (can't retract in stages, except by setting fully up, then selecting approach flap as it passes that point). Later ones change this, but I've only flown one E90 so not sure.