@@edadan Kinda makes me want to go out and buy a plastic model kit and a tube of that glue just to remember/re-live my childhood. Then There's Hoppes #9...oh baby! Thumbs-up if you know Hoppes #9 :-)
Don't blame the Chinese. They can purchase an american aircraft manufacture and copy the production ten fold in China and allow the US market to go bankrupt due to egregious product liability rulings. Americans did this to themselves and they (you) deserve to mortgage your life and pay $600,000-$1.3m to china for your four seat piston airplane. Should have voted NO on everyone who has held office in California and New York and the DNC since the 1960s.
5:11 - "Looks I picked the wrong week to quit sniffing glue..." Really interesting video, Paul, as I learned about the continuous improvement efforts of building aircraft.
Imagine how much more you would learn about GA and how much you would laugh, if you could fly with Paul on a weekend cross country/camping trip. Would be one of the best x-country trips of a life time, for any GA Pilot!👍🇺🇸
Fascinating to see a successful, low-volume, America-based company. I toured Hartzell in September: they have gone CNC/robotic/machining-center crazy, with humans doing the cleanup, assembly, and painting. Their composite blade division is a separate, younger-employee division that is slowly eating aluminum's lunch...
I was thinking the same after spending the first 3 minutes of the video of some manager describing how he is trying to get more efficiency. For a worker that usually means more work in less time for the same pay . . .
You picked THE nice day to be in Duluth, well done! Great video, fun to learn about that side of the manufacturing process. Sure is a whole lot quieter that Cessna, Beach or Piper!
I agree!! Out of any of the fixed wing and Rotorcraft I have flown, the 2017 SR20 G6 is my FAVORITE! Its beautiful, Smooth, Fast, has great Xc capability, and the Cirrus Perspective Avionics System (G1000 MFD/PFD) is just wonderful!!!
Jaime, right on brother!!! I love the idea of having a parachute in the aircraft, I actually thought that would be a great idea when I was 12 and flying with my Dad every weekend in a Cessne 172. (back in 1972 over LA County CA)
I was part of the team that helped to bring LEAN Manufacturing to Boeing's 747 Final Assembly Line, in 1997. Back then, Boring was said to be living a 'Profitless Prosperity' in that they were building over 600 aircraft per year but made no money. During this time we had a 4 Takt Time, meaning every 4 a 747 went out the door. Needless to say LEAN Manufacturing was imperative. Thanks for showing your LEAN Manufacturing in this impressive aircraft final assembly arena. One question, why do you still move the aircraft versus putting the aircraft on a moving line?
Years ago I worked as a temp for a company that made folding step stools for Walmart. Me, being the new guy, they gave me an old WWII era riveting machine which was twice as fast as the brand new air-hydraulic riveters. Other workers begged me to slow down because there was now way they could do the same volume of work I did but the company would increase quotas if they saw me doing well with an older machine.
Hi Paul, have watched this a few times now and find it fascinating. Be great to see you and Larry to a series of visiting other manufacturers and OEM's production facilities across the whole of GA. Best Jason.
As a German, sorry for nitpicking. "Takt" is not German for "baton", it's German for "measure" as in the interval of time in a music piece. So the little stick a conductor waves around in front of the orchestra to set the pace is called a "Taktstock" (Stock = stick) which is I think where the misunderstanding with the baton comes from. Deriving from the music expression, "Takt" is then in general used as: Precise interval of time.
As someone who has worked on brand new Cirrus SRs, they definitely put quantity over quality these days. Some stuff I'm surprised gets through the quality control programme.
Reminded me of the story of the Willow Run - B24 - factory in Michigan. The plant opened in 1942, Henry Ford was in charge, stumbled out of the gate with some hiccups, think 5-10 planes a month until mid-1943 then ...... one plane every hour, 24/7
hi Paul. how in the world did you get access to film in there?! AVweb must have some Pull up in Duluth 👍😉 thank you for the tour. i’m in Japanese automotive manufacturing, so i was amazed that Cirrus opened their doors to you. i assume that there were “can’t film here” areas, but that was quite a peek into Cirrus’s manufacturing. most joints keep their production ops screwed down tighter than a floozie’s miniskirt, so i was quite engaged in the content! ...and you seemed to be on your best behavior there. good on ya & thanks again for the inside look you gave us.
Fuselages built in similar manner to Airfix plastic kits- two complete haves glued together. Great method. Only other plane built like this was the De Havilland Mosquito, but made of plywood and balsa composite. Very strong, till the casein glue turned to mush in the tropics.
So if I understand the presentation correctly Cirrus has 600 Vision Jets on order and currently cannot build more than 100 per year (approx. two planes per week). That's a nice problem to have but I'm not sure that they are being aggressive enough in setting their new production goals. They need to increase production to a least 12 planes a week in order to meet the current demand of the 600 plane backlog. That requires them to increase production to at least 10 more planes a week! That's a tall order that going to require many additional employees and larger factory space. I wish them good luck during this ambitious expansion.
Yes and it seems that their process is more of a job shop environment. Their improvements plateau... could call goldratt consulting, study up on TOC and or hire synchrono.com
"Takt" is not German for baton, that would be "Taktstock". "Takt" is German for bar or measure in musical notation. It can also be used in German in the sense in which it is used here for a regular subdivision of time outside music. 4-stroke engines are also called "4-Takt" in German.
Takt is the German word for the baton that an orchestra conductor uses to regulate the tempo of the music. Takt time may be thought of as a measurable “beat time,” “rate time” or “heartbeat.” In Lean, takt time is the rate at which a finished product needs to be completed in order to meet customer demand. From the SixSigma Lean documentation.
Repeating it or citing a documentation about a quality management methodology doesn't change the meaning of a German word. Take my word for it, I'm a German native speaker and a musician. The German word for a conductor's baton is "Taktstock" (de.wikipedia.org/wiki/Taktstock), it is never abbreviated to "Takt", it may be abbreviated to "Stock" (stick). Takt can mean all the other things they cite, though, besides "bar" and "measure" in music, but not "baton".
Sorry, your simple translation is not correct...not People Hunter, (plural) and what that suggests(!), but PeopleS Hunter as in possessive, of the people...analogous to Volkswagon being a wagon of the people. Cheers
Beautiful plane! But I still cant ignore the fact (if im not mistaken) that the reason the plane has a chute is because it couldn't get a spin certification without it. It needed chute for the cert
One things for sure, when/if I ever decide to own a Cirrus, I would most certainly dedicate at least 5+ hours, with a CFI that has 500+ hrs in a Cirrus, and practice all aspects of slow speed flight/landing configuration/slow speed stalls, in an effort to better anticipate or have a more keen awareness of an on coming stall, more so, than had the dedicated 5+ hours had not been implemented. Hope that makes sense. Happy/Safe Flying!👍🇺🇸
As far as I know, Cirrus provides courses to all Cirrus pilots. If you buy a new Cirrus (or a second hand), they will give you ground training and 10+ hours flight training with a CFI, focused on the transition from any other plane to the SR. All you need is a Cirrus and the money for the fuel. My boss here in Brazil is buying his third Cirrus and I am going to take the course again, for the third time. There is no such thing as too much knowledge!
Very interesting. Good video. But if they are very successful, why are they trying to stay in a confined space? if they have a 7 year back log they must lose a lot of orders. That's russian lada wait times, our lives are too short for that. Last I checked, warehouse space is not that expensive and if they are moving 100-200 million dollar products a year, that cost should be negligible. Also I wonder if you couldn't do an aircraft hull as a single piece composite, applying it inside two mold sides, using a teardrop hull shape such that the monotonous compound curve surfaces are rigid as just a shell without any bulkheads. Use of sandwiching for rigidity if needed but I'm guessing it wont be with carbon fiber, especially once pressurized. Having to glue together two sides when you could have continuous fiber all the way around is an unpleasing compromise of the extreme strength of composites. It's also hard to beat weight wise. I would also aggressively pursue making the SR size aircraft a sleeker pressurized twin jet at quarter the weight. Imagine an SR23 at 250kg empty with two small turbofan jets at the back, pressurized hull going 700km/h at FL450 with better fuel economy than an SR22. And lower price. 4 seats and a lav at the back with one time use inserts and wet wipes. No plumbing. Most times you don't need a classic bus config jet. Runway to runway autopilot, lean back and enjoy the quiet of a fast rear engine jet at high altitude. It would wipe clean the GA market.
watching this video 2 years later my comment was spot on. If only the world listened. One more thing this time, the profit on each plane must be staggering. Fiber and resin costs nothing compared to these prices and while the engines are quite overpriced, it's only 1 and still leaves enormous room. SR22T sell for a million, the engine might cost them 100k. The SF50 costs 3million and the engine might cost a million. Visionjet is only a bit larger than SR22. or a wide LSA.
It looks and sounds great, little dolphins, friendly air crafts from Cirrus. Why can't start a couple more facilities to meet the demand, lot of people switch to other brands due to delay. I think the more you produce the more you can sell. Good luck.
Management is always looking to be more efficient, as they should be. What astounds me is that they think adding more management to yell at workers to speed up is the typical solution.
Any mention of Chicom ownership in this piece and in particular the ownership being the state owned Aviation Industry Corporation of China and that AICC is a Chicom defense contractor? Inquiring GA folk might be interested who owns what in their next 22 or 400 buy....?
The Rolls Royce general aviation Turbine engine [ M250 with 450shp] would be perfect for the Cirrus Sr22. It could be their flagship top of line model. Smooth and fast.
Dan TheMan that would be a decent option. Especially like a c30/40 roughly 100lbs less weight and 2x the power. With slightly wider wings the range could be similar.. to a piston powered sr22.
@@randerson752 Yes a slight extension of span at the tips would allow a reduced powersetting at cruise for range while maintaining the speed. Being able to do home to LasVegas non-stop at FL170 would be very nice.
The interesting thing is that Cirrus does not have a better safety record than the rest of general aviation. The parachute didn't help out at all. I think the presence of a parachute actually makes the plane a little more dangerous (for some people). They get really brave and fly in to situations that they wouldn't normally try if they didn't have the chute. Also...the parachute can only be deployed under 135 knots. The planes cruise a LOT faster than that!
Light sport aircraft do. Government regs, as in all things, increase cost, complexity and time required... or prevent new things from being made at all.
I've been watching your videos for some time now, but when I looked at your channel this morning my account wasn't subscribed! Don't know if it somehow glitched, or if I'm that blonde. Either way I'm glad to be a subscriber again!
With a backlog of 600 units, they should be talking to other manufacturers for help. A lot of those orders can be lost to competitors who can deliver faster.
At 4:47 I’m shocked to see “safety” so far down the list... I would have expected to see safety in the number one spot... things that make you go hummmm..... If they want to maximize production they should look into getting a few more of those KUKA robots. I work with them on a daily basis and talk about shaving off human time! Those robots can do anything you ask them to do...without sick days, smoke breaks or lunch time..
Safety is never the number one priority in anything. If it was, you would go sit in a cave and suck your thumb. The only time safety is listed as the number one priority is when the leadership is lying. So, go out to your airplane, sit in the cockpit, and say, safety is my number one priority. Not flying, not having fun, just safety. Then get out of your plane and go sit in your cave.
I liked the video, but I'm disturbed by corporate worrying more about proficiency than quality. Don't get me wrong..... They need to be proficient if they are going to remain profitable. I just hope things don't get overlooked, or "slide" because of it.
148 lives saved. But if you can pop the chute isnt it because your plane failed? I do remember being up flying in 50 year old Cessnas wishing I had a chute so don't misunderstand.
Did anyone else feel like with increased production comes lack in quality? I understand businesses want to make money, but there’s no way quality will be the same
Often increased production rates mean higher quality. If an item moves to the next station with a quality issue that disrupts the next step, then it can cause chaos. That's why production is slowly ramped up, quality issues are removed, the process is improved and streamlined, and the production line speeds up.
The video was informative. You have to get a better editor and one of the camera shots (9:04) was out of focus on the subject and the editor used the same footage twice (1:57) and (8:30). Amateur for a professional outfit. Again the video was informative.
I noticed that, but I'm not sure a YT videographer is the same level of professionalism you require. It's a new level of citizen-journalist. Technically, they may be pro's, getting money for their product, but I doubt it's much. I've been a professional videographer and TV broadcast pro for decades. I don't expect everyone to have the same trianing, experience and budget I had. If they can make-do, I'm fine... plus the subject matter I like won't be covered on the TeeVee.
Im happy for their success against all odds and the FAA. Even if it took an act of congress to make a safe space for new aircraft manufactures. But Cirrus aircraft are not at all exiting to me. They get my blood pumping like most people enjoy seeing another motorhome blocking an On-ramp or Tractor Trailer parking spot. Not to say its not a quality product. It is. Its probably one of the most Gucci machines made in America. Up there with Earth Roamer or Daniel Defense. Though just not anywhere near as cool. They went all out with small, high aspect ratio wing, laminar flow, high wing loading, and big engines. But it can barely get out of its own way and utterly fails to out-climb even a housefly who finds herself caught in a thermal updraft. Seriously, the climb gradient of these turds alone gives me the willies. Not, its not much worse climb rate per minute as a Cessna 172. But its twice the distance covered for less total gain in altitude.
The SR-22 is probably the best GA aircraft in the market, however it’s engine is old technology. It needs upgrades, needs to be more computerized. Also, the fuel selector needs to be removed, I hate that sh!t.
The world needs more Paul Bertorelli.
Paul is the best aviation commentator. Great information delivered with his characteristic “just right” humor.
"the glue you werent supposed to sniff" :D Made my day. Great video, thank you.
I grew up in the 60's and 70's building model cars/airplanes. I still remember "Testors model cement" !
@@edadan Kinda makes me want to go out and buy a plastic model kit and a tube of that glue just to remember/re-live my childhood. Then There's Hoppes #9...oh baby! Thumbs-up if you know Hoppes #9 :-)
For Cirrus employees, that would be one big ass tube of glue. o_O
Great video and I applaud Cirrus for allowing cameras into the factory for us to get a glimpse into the manufacturing process. Very impressive!
They can do it for now until their ChiCom boss stops the practice. The video crew has a minder just like when they film in ChiCom land.
Don't blame the Chinese. They can purchase an american aircraft manufacture and copy the production ten fold in China and allow the US market to go bankrupt due to egregious product liability rulings. Americans did this to themselves and they (you) deserve to mortgage your life and pay $600,000-$1.3m to china for your four seat piston airplane.
Should have voted NO on everyone who has held office in California and New York and the DNC since the 1960s.
5:11 - "Looks I picked the wrong week to quit sniffing glue..."
Really interesting video, Paul, as I learned about the continuous improvement efforts of building aircraft.
Paul, you are a true professional! Great insight into how Cirrus's are made! Thanks for putting this together!
NICE TOUR, I LOVED SEEING ALL THE PROCESSING, ESPECIALLY THE PAINT SIDE.! BEAUTIFUL AIRCRAFT VIDEOS, KEEP THEM COMING.!!
Great video. Many thanks for posting.
2:01 guy nailed that shot
Imagine how much more you would learn about GA and how much you would laugh, if you could fly with Paul on a weekend cross country/camping trip. Would be one of the best x-country trips of a life time, for any GA Pilot!👍🇺🇸
THANK YOU FOR UPLOADING IT.
Fascinating to see a successful, low-volume, America-based company. I toured Hartzell in September: they have gone CNC/robotic/machining-center crazy, with humans doing the cleanup, assembly, and painting. Their composite blade division is a separate, younger-employee division that is slowly eating aluminum's lunch...
Pete Kuhns Chinese owned though
Amazing. Best wishes to Cirrus employees. I hope they pay you well!
I was thinking the same after spending the first 3 minutes of the video of some manager describing how he is trying to get more efficiency. For a worker that usually means more work in less time for the same pay . . .
You picked THE nice day to be in Duluth, well done! Great video, fun to learn about that side of the manufacturing process. Sure is a whole lot quieter that Cessna, Beach or Piper!
What happened to Cirrus's video On How it's Made? That was a great video 1 hour long and very informative about 7 years ago.
Great inside look at a great plane!
Christopher Sorensen Great plane NO, high selling YES
Why are you under the impression that this isn't a great plane?
I agree!! Out of any of the fixed wing and Rotorcraft I have flown, the 2017 SR20 G6 is my FAVORITE! Its beautiful, Smooth, Fast, has great Xc capability, and the Cirrus Perspective Avionics System (G1000 MFD/PFD) is just wonderful!!!
Wonderful Video
Would love to see an update to this video as Paul mentioned at the end. How does the production line look now?
Excellent presentation 👏👏👌
Jaime, right on brother!!! I love the idea of having a parachute in the aircraft, I actually thought that would be a great idea when I was 12 and flying with my Dad every weekend in a Cessne 172. (back in 1972 over LA County CA)
Looks like I picked the wrong week to quit sniffing glue.
I was part of the team that helped to bring LEAN Manufacturing to Boeing's 747 Final Assembly Line, in 1997. Back then, Boring was said to be living a 'Profitless Prosperity' in that they were building over 600 aircraft per year but made no money. During this time we had a 4 Takt Time, meaning every 4 a 747 went out the door. Needless to say LEAN Manufacturing was imperative. Thanks for showing your LEAN Manufacturing in this impressive aircraft final assembly arena.
One question, why do you still move the aircraft versus putting the aircraft on a moving line?
Years ago I worked as a temp for a company that made folding step stools for Walmart. Me, being the new guy, they gave me an old WWII era riveting machine which was twice as fast as the brand new air-hydraulic riveters. Other workers begged me to slow down because there was now way they could do the same volume of work I did but the company would increase quotas if they saw me doing well with an older machine.
Hi Paul, have watched this a few times now and find it fascinating. Be great to see you and Larry to a series of visiting other manufacturers and OEM's production facilities across the whole of GA. Best Jason.
I love the blue on the Vision
im a big fan of the vision jet, very nice
The major difference between this and my F3A models is only size and a functional cockpit. Amazing stuff.
Thank you for this great video!
As a German, sorry for nitpicking. "Takt" is not German for "baton", it's German for "measure" as in the interval of time in a music piece. So the little stick a conductor waves around in front of the orchestra to set the pace is called a "Taktstock" (Stock = stick) which is I think where the misunderstanding with the baton comes from.
Deriving from the music expression, "Takt" is then in general used as: Precise interval of time.
Tachometer
Metronome@@roofman1200
As someone who has worked on brand new Cirrus SRs, they definitely put quantity over quality these days. Some stuff I'm surprised gets through the quality control programme.
Excellent
Interesante las formas de querer optimizar la fabricación y la fluidez del trabajo en la fábrica de aviones. ¡¡Me gustó mucho!!.
Reminded me of the story of the Willow Run - B24 - factory in Michigan. The plant opened in 1942, Henry Ford was in charge, stumbled out of the gate with some hiccups, think 5-10 planes a month until mid-1943 then ...... one plane every hour, 24/7
hi Paul. how in the world did you get access to film in there?! AVweb must have some Pull up in Duluth 👍😉 thank you for the tour. i’m in Japanese automotive manufacturing, so i was amazed that Cirrus opened their doors to you. i assume that there were “can’t film here” areas, but that was quite a peek into Cirrus’s manufacturing. most joints keep their production ops screwed down tighter than a floozie’s miniskirt, so i was quite engaged in the content! ...and you seemed to be on your best behavior there. good on ya & thanks again for the inside look you gave us.
kind of strikes me as inspired marketing...
AMAZING... Thanks for the tour ';-)
Mooi vliegtuig😊
Fuselages built in similar manner to Airfix plastic kits- two complete haves glued together. Great method. Only other plane built like this was the De Havilland Mosquito, but made of plywood and balsa composite. Very strong, till the casein glue turned to mush in the tropics.
Nice Video
Dam that vision is a sexy jet
Most informative and entertaining video! I just wish I could afford one of those beauties.
In 1973 I toured the Piper factory in Vero Beach the line moved forward 1 station every 45 minutes. 12 Cherokees every day.
So if I understand the presentation correctly Cirrus has 600 Vision Jets on order and currently cannot build more than 100 per year (approx. two planes per week). That's a nice problem to have but I'm not sure that they are being aggressive enough in setting their new production goals. They need to increase production to a least 12 planes a week in order to meet the current demand of the 600 plane backlog. That requires them to increase production to at least 10 more planes a week! That's a tall order that going to require many additional employees and larger factory space. I wish them good luck during this ambitious expansion.
It sounds like Cirrus is incorporating the LEAN process flow, these guys are serious about production; yeah-hoo!
Jeffrey Galeski You are right. They seem to implement some steps and rules from the Toyota Production System.
Kaizen was the term I learned back in the day. The spirit is the same, continuous improvement.
Yes and it seems that their process is more of a job shop environment. Their improvements plateau... could call goldratt consulting, study up on TOC and or hire synchrono.com
Love the channel, but you guys SERIOUSLY need to check your camera focus
This was very interesting and informative
If Cirrus keeps it's aircraft prices reasonable and good product support, it should be in the forefront of light aircraft sales!!
I love it, i wish i can help you guys.
i want the vision jet and ill buy it soon.
Does this company hire welders? I was thinking about applying to this company in Duluth once I graduate from the tech.
"Takt" is not German for baton, that would be "Taktstock". "Takt" is German for bar or measure in musical notation. It can also be used in German in the sense in which it is used here for a regular subdivision of time outside music. 4-stroke engines are also called "4-Takt" in German.
Takt is the German word for the baton that an orchestra conductor uses to regulate the tempo of the music. Takt time may be thought of as a measurable “beat time,” “rate time” or “heartbeat.” In Lean, takt time is the rate at which a finished product needs to be completed in order to meet customer demand.
From the SixSigma Lean documentation.
Repeating it or citing a documentation about a quality management methodology doesn't change the meaning of a German word. Take my word for it, I'm a German native speaker and a musician. The German word for a conductor's baton is "Taktstock" (de.wikipedia.org/wiki/Taktstock), it is never abbreviated to "Takt", it may be abbreviated to "Stock" (stick). Takt can mean all the other things they cite, though, besides "bar" and "measure" in music, but not "baton".
OK. What does Volksjäger stand for?
@@kradius2169: People hunter.
Sorry, your simple translation is not correct...not People Hunter, (plural) and what that suggests(!), but PeopleS Hunter as in possessive, of the people...analogous to Volkswagon being a wagon of the people. Cheers
Why is the interior carpeting put together with so much velcro though? Working on Cirrus and doing annuals is fun, but man all the velcro jeez.
Audio is pulsating between left and right channels?
why they don't cover the tires during painting, very sorry.
that's a lycoming engine hanging from the hoist. have they changed engines in their recips ?
The sr20 uses a Lycoming 390. They changed that in 2017 or 16. The sr22 still uses the tcm io550 and tsio 550.
Beautiful plane! But I still cant ignore the fact (if im not mistaken) that the reason the plane has a chute is because it couldn't get a spin certification without it. It needed chute for the cert
Actually, it's the other way around. The FAA decided Cirrus didn't need the spin cert BECAUSE of the parachute.
One things for sure, when/if I ever decide to own a Cirrus, I would most certainly dedicate at least 5+ hours, with a CFI that has 500+ hrs in a Cirrus, and practice all aspects of slow speed flight/landing configuration/slow speed stalls, in an effort to better anticipate or have a more keen awareness of an on coming stall, more so, than had the dedicated 5+ hours had not been implemented. Hope that makes sense.
Happy/Safe Flying!👍🇺🇸
As far as I know, Cirrus provides courses to all Cirrus pilots. If you buy a new Cirrus (or a second hand), they will give you ground training and 10+ hours flight training with a CFI, focused on the transition from any other plane to the SR. All you need is a Cirrus and the money for the fuel. My boss here in Brazil is buying his third Cirrus and I am going to take the course again, for the third time. There is no such thing as too much knowledge!
@@aboriani Yes, learn what the Cirrus airfoil/wing can and cannot do. Then fly it ALWAYS within the flight envelope and enjoy it forever.
Clarity, brevity & great informative Video Channel ! Cheers !
“Line balance”
Getting rid of underperforming employees.
you are doing all right, love the sob
Very interesting. Good video. But if they are very successful, why are they trying to stay in a confined space? if they have a 7 year back log they must lose a lot of orders. That's russian lada wait times, our lives are too short for that. Last I checked, warehouse space is not that expensive and if they are moving 100-200 million dollar products a year, that cost should be negligible.
Also I wonder if you couldn't do an aircraft hull as a single piece composite, applying it inside two mold sides, using a teardrop hull shape such that the monotonous compound curve surfaces are rigid as just a shell without any bulkheads. Use of sandwiching for rigidity if needed but I'm guessing it wont be with carbon fiber, especially once pressurized. Having to glue together two sides when you could have continuous fiber all the way around is an unpleasing compromise of the extreme strength of composites. It's also hard to beat weight wise.
I would also aggressively pursue making the SR size aircraft a sleeker pressurized twin jet at quarter the weight. Imagine an SR23 at 250kg empty with two small turbofan jets at the back, pressurized hull going 700km/h at FL450 with better fuel economy than an SR22. And lower price. 4 seats and a lav at the back with one time use inserts and wet wipes. No plumbing.
Most times you don't need a classic bus config jet.
Runway to runway autopilot, lean back and enjoy the quiet of a fast rear engine jet at high altitude. It would wipe clean the GA market.
watching this video 2 years later my comment was spot on. If only the world listened. One more thing this time, the profit on each plane must be staggering. Fiber and resin costs nothing compared to these prices and while the engines are quite overpriced, it's only 1 and still leaves enormous room. SR22T sell for a million, the engine might cost them 100k. The SF50 costs 3million and the engine might cost a million. Visionjet is only a bit larger than SR22. or a wide LSA.
It looks and sounds great, little dolphins, friendly air crafts from Cirrus. Why can't start a couple more facilities to meet the demand, lot of people switch to other brands due to delay. I think the more you produce the more you can sell. Good luck.
Nice bird
I wich that i could build my very own
Management is always looking to be more efficient, as they should be. What astounds me is that they think adding more management to yell at workers to speed up is the typical solution.
Any mention of Chicom ownership in this piece and in particular the ownership being the state owned Aviation Industry Corporation of China and that AICC is a Chicom defense contractor? Inquiring GA folk might be interested who owns what in their next 22 or 400 buy....?
Who builds them. Airframes, engines, props, instruments - all built by American employees putting money in their pockets and back into our economy.
its just small planes you should do more.
Id love to see cirrus a SR22T as a tail dragger and PT6 as a option..
The Rolls Royce general aviation Turbine engine [ M250 with 450shp] would be perfect for the Cirrus Sr22. It could be their flagship top of line model. Smooth and fast.
Dan TheMan that would be a decent option. Especially like a c30/40 roughly 100lbs less weight and 2x the power. With slightly wider wings the range could be similar.. to a piston powered sr22.
@@randerson752 Yes a slight extension of span at the tips would allow a reduced powersetting at cruise for range while maintaining the speed. Being able to do home to LasVegas non-stop at FL170 would be very nice.
Aeronautics always interesting
The interesting thing is that Cirrus does not have a better safety record than the rest of general aviation. The parachute didn't help out at all. I think the presence of a parachute actually makes the plane a little more dangerous (for some people). They get really brave and fly in to situations that they wouldn't normally try if they didn't have the chute. Also...the parachute can only be deployed under 135 knots. The planes cruise a LOT faster than that!
Yeah, JFK Jr could've been saved from his own folly... to go do it again.
Cirrus sf50 should have payload capacity of 800 kg with a range of 2000 km with full load
Stupid question: I WILL LOVE to buy something like this, but they are so expensive. Has any company tried to do planes like cars and lower the cost?
Light sport aircraft do.
Government regs, as in all things, increase cost, complexity and time required... or prevent new things from being made at all.
Beautiful plane. But I still like the center yoke better
I'd want to be PIC on the right, to have right-hand stick and left hand for engine management.
I've been watching your videos for some time now, but when I looked at your channel this morning my account wasn't subscribed! Don't know if it somehow glitched, or if I'm that blonde. Either way I'm glad to be a subscriber again!
With a backlog of 600 units, they should be talking to other manufacturers for help. A lot of those orders can be lost to competitors who can deliver faster.
At 4:47 I’m shocked to see “safety” so far down the list... I would have expected to see safety in the number one spot... things that make you go hummmm.....
If they want to maximize production they should look into getting a few more of those KUKA robots. I work with them on a daily basis and talk about shaving off human time! Those robots can do anything you ask them to do...without sick days, smoke breaks or lunch time..
Agree maybe using them to paint the aircraft? They surely should be able to do so.
It seems it is more about the health & safety of the workforce..
Safety is never the number one priority in anything. If it was, you would go sit in a cave and suck your thumb. The only time safety is listed as the number one priority is when the leadership is lying. So, go out to your airplane, sit in the cockpit, and say, safety is my number one priority. Not flying, not having fun, just safety. Then get out of your plane and go sit in your cave.
nice
one day ill buy the cirrus vision jet g2+
Bravi !
I liked the video, but I'm disturbed by corporate worrying more about proficiency than quality. Don't get me wrong..... They need to be proficient if they are going to remain profitable. I just hope things don't get overlooked, or "slide" because of it.
i've just flown one across the pond, faultless.
I wish I was wealthy. I would buy two and donate one.
148 lives saved. But if you can pop the chute isnt it because your plane failed? I do remember being up flying in 50 year old Cessnas wishing I had a chute so don't misunderstand.
Not usually. Most accidents in GA are pilot error...flying into clouds and getting disorientated, stalling, etc.
BumHaven how about a video about the times chutes were used? That would be really interesting.
Sir I want air line job
Cirrus is now owned by a Chinese company right?
The Blade yup
I would love if they one day put a turboprop instead of those bloated lawnmower engines inside.
cool
das ist mein Traum in deses firma arbeiten.
Many videos these days are not in focus. That's the case in this video too.
Did anyone else feel like with increased production comes lack in quality? I understand businesses want to make money, but there’s no way quality will be the same
Often increased production rates mean higher quality. If an item moves to the next station with a quality issue that disrupts the next step, then it can cause chaos. That's why production is slowly ramped up, quality issues are removed, the process is improved and streamlined, and the production line speeds up.
but. YOU DO NOT WANT TO RUSH QUALITY.
1:19 pft
The video was informative. You have to get a better editor and one of the camera shots (9:04) was out of focus on the subject and the editor used the same footage twice (1:57) and (8:30). Amateur for a professional outfit. Again the video was informative.
I noticed that, but I'm not sure a YT videographer is the same level of professionalism you require. It's a new level of citizen-journalist. Technically, they may be pro's, getting money for their product, but I doubt it's much.
I've been a professional videographer and TV broadcast pro for decades. I don't expect everyone to have the same trianing, experience and budget I had. If they can make-do, I'm fine... plus the subject matter I like won't be covered on the TeeVee.
'
how come the airplane company did not use policy clothes codes for all workers...
why workers uses caps on the heads and sloppy clothes at work
The tube of glue, don't sniff it. Got it.😉
Great video, I hope at some point new airplanes will be affordable to blue collar citizens.
They would be, but for government regulations and support of the oligopoly against competition.
If I ever get gifted with loads of dough Rey me voslei, I will definitely be getting one.
motorisaçao e fabricaçao propia
make me a vision jet g2+
Only rich people can afford these
Im happy for their success against all odds and the FAA. Even if it took an act of congress to make a safe space for new aircraft manufactures.
But Cirrus aircraft are not at all exiting to me. They get my blood pumping like most people enjoy seeing another motorhome blocking an On-ramp or Tractor Trailer parking spot.
Not to say its not a quality product. It is. Its probably one of the most Gucci machines made in America. Up there with Earth Roamer or Daniel Defense. Though just not anywhere near as cool.
They went all out with small, high aspect ratio wing, laminar flow, high wing loading, and big engines. But it can barely get out of its own way and utterly fails to out-climb even a housefly who finds herself caught in a thermal updraft. Seriously, the climb gradient of these turds alone gives me the willies. Not, its not much worse climb rate per minute as a Cessna 172. But its twice the distance covered for less total gain in altitude.
Maybe Sirius could build a safer plane that doesn't stall and drop like a stone and kill everyone on board.
The SR-22 is probably the best GA aircraft in the market, however it’s engine is old technology. It needs upgrades, needs to be more computerized. Also, the fuel selector needs to be removed, I hate that sh!t.