What a wonderful airplane. For me, who fly an airplane with 200 hp, it is unthinkable to go up to 20,000 ft with a rate of 1000 ft / min. The only thing I would like to say is that with two baby on board, I would tend to have a cabin pressure lower than 9300. It risks becoming uncomfortable
Nah, there's lots of cities above 9300. It's not the altitude, its the rate of change that makes it uncomfortable, especially in the decent phase. Been there, done that with a bad cold, feels like someone stabbing me in both ears with pencils... in this case, the cabin rate was only 400 feet per minute, and the kids looked happy.
THX Michele for your comment! Be sure, we always check the health status of the kiddies - especially runny noses or a problem with ventilation of the paranasal sinuses. We of course would never go flying with our kiddies when they show any respiratory impairments. We also try to make them drinking on climbout which helps to balance the inner and outer pressure. Technically the pressurized cabin only allows a limited gap between inside and outside pressure, that's why you need to lower "gently" the cabine pressure to the indicated value.
is this the m500 or m600?
I is a Meridian, almost identical to the M500. We updated the G1000 to G1000NXi so it is a M500 ;-)
What a wonderful airplane. For me, who fly an airplane with 200 hp, it is unthinkable to go up to 20,000 ft with a rate of 1000 ft / min. The only thing I would like to say is that with two baby on board, I would tend to have a cabin pressure lower than 9300. It risks becoming uncomfortable
It’s not 200 horsepower, it’s either 500 or 600 horsepower
Nah, there's lots of cities above 9300. It's not the altitude, its the rate of change that makes it uncomfortable, especially in the decent phase. Been there, done that with a bad cold, feels like someone stabbing me in both ears with pencils... in this case, the cabin rate was only 400 feet per minute, and the kids looked happy.
@@kenbrand8972 He was talking about the airplane he flew only having 200 hp, not this one.
@@brnmcc01 thanks I see what you mean after rereading his post
THX Michele for your comment! Be sure, we always check the health status of the kiddies - especially runny noses or a problem with ventilation of the paranasal sinuses. We of course would never go flying with our kiddies when they show any respiratory impairments. We also try to make them drinking on climbout which helps to balance the inner and outer pressure. Technically the pressurized cabin only allows a limited gap between inside and outside pressure, that's why you need to lower "gently" the cabine pressure to the indicated value.