Transatlantic in Arrow??
Ok, so I’ve hit the 1000-hour mark on my ATP journey and I’m getting ansty...lol...I’m considering going big and attempting an overseas flight to Europe. I’ve done a lot of reading and it seems that (short of installing HF radio and some survival equipment), the only risk is that my airplane is normally aspirated and does not have the performance to combat 50-100kt headwinds. I don’t mind abandoning (or selling) the plane in Europe if the westbound trip is impossible due to headwinds, but I’m wondering if the eastbound trip is even possible in a non-turbo light piston...
Does anyone have any anecdotal evidence eithet way? I’ve found stories about TBMs, Pilatus, and King Air’s, but nothing about 1967 Arrows lol
Does anyone have any anecdotal evidence eithet way? I’ve found stories about TBMs, Pilatus, and King Air’s, but nothing about 1967 Arrows lol
Comments
There is some routing up though Canada, Iceland, Greenland, maybe the Faroe Islands to the UK that has been done before. Definitely not for me, but I think the combination of anxiety and boredom would be the toughest part of the whole thing to overcome. I’d probably want more than 48 gallons useable, too!
Jim M.
PA-28R-200
Based at BUU
ATC Chicago TRACON
Lindbergh seemed to get there non-stop in a non-turbo piston, lol. My old Seneca made the trip across many times, but that was a twin-turbo. My first thought would be: what is too much risk? Winds, bad weather, ice up north, engine failure, other mechanical or navigational failure. What does the pit of your stomach say?
Scott Sherer
Wright Brothers Master Pilot, FAA Commercial Pilot
Headwinds, very scary...But @Jmcmanna mentioned Faroe Island...that is a great out...makes my longest leg over water ~250nm... The challenge will be terrain+headwinds on the return flight...will you keep you posted...it’s gonna be uuuuge!!!
That is some major league flying. There is a lot of planning that would go into a flight like that. You will be in a non-radar environment a lot. You also need to do last minute, planning based on winds for “equal time points” and divert windows. Also, a lot of that area of Canada is remote and might as well be water. Are you familiar with reporting requirements, diversion procedures and lost comm procedures? Up north, weather changes quickly and unexpectedly. The worst I’ve seen is OVC 003, 1/2 +RN winds were 45 gusts to 65. All this with a better than 3000/3 forecast on departure and an enroute check on the HF.
There is no way I would do it with an Arrow and I have in King Airs, Metroliners, DC9s and 737s. It your life though...
Ron Himmelreich, USN Retired
N774PC 1974 Piper Archer 180
There could definitely be icing at 10K; anywhere above the freezing level in the clouds could potentially be an issue. For reference, around Chicago in July the freezing level had been hanging around 15,000’ and we did have icing pireps above that. I think being flexible on the schedule would be key.
Jim M.
PA-28R-200
Based at BUU
ATC Chicago TRACON
Remember, FDR told Lindbergh to put his airplane in a box and ship it home.
Austin
Lindbergh’s plane was specially designed for his trip and held 450 gals of fuel... My Arrow holds only 50 and it will be full of emergency equipment. So technically my mission is way more difficult...:)
Just saw a post on Reddit about someone planning the same thing in a Mooney and thought Elio might be interested.
https://www.reddit.com/r/flying/comments/d5le7s/my_route_that_i_planned_to_cross_the_atlantic_in/?utm_source=share&utm_medium=ios_app&utm_name=iossmf
Jim M.
PA-28R-200
Based at BUU
ATC Chicago TRACON
Elio, the westerly winds aren't a problem. Just keep going east till you hit the US.
Scott Sherer
Wright Brothers Master Pilot, FAA Commercial Pilot
I’m sure flying GA through Asia is a piece of cake politically.....
Jim M.
PA-28R-200
Based at BUU
ATC Chicago TRACON
https://www.dropbox.com/s/an25bndu2g4nqld/Cuban Eight.mov?dl=0
I got dizzy watching the video! I’ll just go ahead and baby my Arrow instead
Jim M.
PA-28R-200
Based at BUU
ATC Chicago TRACON
My advice is to seriously consider the trip, but first get advice from people who have done this before in small planes. But if it was me, I would take smaller steps. Take some trips to southern Canada, then northern Canada to gain some high latitude experience. Fly to the Caribbean to get over-water and border crossing experience. Good luck.
Old old pilots... You can fill in the rest . Imho