We Fly: Cirrus Vision Jet G2+
Flying|October 2021
Hot and high and connected
Julie Boatman
We Fly: Cirrus Vision Jet G2+

What will it feel like if you ride the chute down? Skydivers know one answer—based on the parachute they strap themselves into. The pilots who have put various aircraft through their initial paces in the experimental stage may know another—the deployment of a flight-test airframe chute to recover during spin testing gone south or an airframemishap. Somewhere in between sits a pilot in the future who has pulled on the Cirrus Airframe Parachute System handle in a Cirrus SF50. The company wants everyone who will sit left seat in its single-engine Vision Jet to know how that feels so pilots will be able to do it if they need to—but not without conscientious determination.

Many pilots, myself among them, will feel uneasy—or worse—at surrendering control of the airplane to a piece of fabric unfolding on thick cables somewhere above the airframe, as you swing like a pendulum below. The sense of this stays with you, proved when I flew in the company’s Vision Jet G1 simulator this past fall at the Vision Center in Knoxville, Tennessee. And it keeps most of us, I believe, from pulling that handle indiscriminately.

Esta historia es de la edición October 2021 de Flying.

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Esta historia es de la edición October 2021 de Flying.

Comience su prueba gratuita de Magzter GOLD de 7 días para acceder a miles de historias premium seleccionadas y a más de 9,000 revistas y periódicos.