Beechcraft Starship over London?
Beechcraft Starship over London?
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Discussion

maturin23

Original Poster:

599 posts

246 months

Friday 14th October 2011
quotequote all
Hi all,

Pretty certain I saw one of these flying over north west London yesterday.

Done a bit of Googling for a twin turboprop passenger plane with canards and 'push' prop engines and this was the closet match.

Had quite a distinctive sound - quite 'rough' for a small turboprop place.

Wikipedia suggest only a few were ever made and most were scrapped.

Was it something else I saw?

Eric Mc

124,940 posts

289 months

Friday 14th October 2011
quotequote all
A Piaggio Avanti?


maturin23

Original Poster:

599 posts

246 months

Friday 14th October 2011
quotequote all
Hi Eric

I saw that on my image trawl, but something about it didn't look right.

Seeing as it seems there are no UK-registered Starships I'm probably wrong though!

magpie215

4,933 posts

213 months

Friday 14th October 2011
quotequote all
IIRC Beechcraft bought back most of the fleet and scrapped them due to the costs of supporting such a small number of aircraft.

mrloudly

2,815 posts

259 months

Friday 14th October 2011
quotequote all
Piaggio was in at Sywell the other week. Lovely looking bit of kit, bl..dy noisy outside though!
I believe Sloane are the UK agent

mrloudly

2,815 posts

259 months

Johnboy Mac

2,666 posts

202 months

Friday 14th October 2011
quotequote all
maturin23 said:
Hi all,

'push' prop engines
O.k. Guys, educate me here. What's the advantage with this engine set up?

mrloudly

2,815 posts

259 months

Friday 14th October 2011
quotequote all
No so much the engine it's the wing layout, props are working in dirty air...

http://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Canard_(aeronautics)

Johnboy Mac

2,666 posts

202 months

Friday 14th October 2011
quotequote all
Ta, that explains a lot.

Henry-F

4,791 posts

269 months

Friday 14th October 2011
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We're based on the final approach to Northolt so see some interesting stuff over the course of a year. The plane you are referring to is a regular visitor to Northolt. I know because it's the noisiest plane on the planet. It howls away to the point where it must surely have to pay a penalty every time it lands or takes off !

Henry smile

mrloudly

2,815 posts

259 months

Friday 14th October 2011
quotequote all
I believe they're releasing a revised edition that is supposed to be a bit quieter. Lovely looking tool though!

maturin23

Original Poster:

599 posts

246 months

Friday 14th October 2011
quotequote all
It'll be the Piaggio then!

You're right about the noise. I hear plenty of planes when I'm working in the garden studio, not many get me out of my seat to have a proper look.

Last time was what I assumed was the Queen's flight doing close formation practice last month - looked like a 146 and a couple of 125s banking VERY close together.

ClockworkCupcake

79,441 posts

296 months

Friday 10th February 2017
quotequote all
Sorry for the thread resurrection, but I saw (and heard) an aircraft with twin pusher props and front canards today in the Farnborough / Camberley area today. It was unusually noisy, although was flying quite low.

I'm guessing it was a Piaggio?

Eric Mc

124,940 posts

289 months

Friday 10th February 2017
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There is at least one Piaggio that drops into Farnborough now and then.

ClockworkCupcake

79,441 posts

296 months

Friday 10th February 2017
quotequote all
Eric Mc said:
There is at least one Piaggio that drops into Farnborough now and then.
I'm guessing it was that then. smile

Dr Jekyll

23,820 posts

285 months

Friday 10th February 2017
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Pity, the Beech Starship was the best looking business aircraft of all time.

Exoticaholic

1,077 posts

236 months

Friday 10th February 2017
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I remember seeing a Starship at Kidlington Airport back in the early 1990's. It transpired that it belonged to Tom Walkinshaw at TWR Group.

It left quite an impression on me for a while because I had never seen a canard aircraft in the flesh until then.

Paul Drawmer

5,121 posts

291 months

Friday 10th February 2017
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I see a Piaggio over here a couple of times a year. Ferrari coming into Kidlington.

The distinctive noise is caused by the action of the prop blades in the turbine exhaust. Their USP is jet performance with prop-jet running costs.

Supposed to be a lower pilot work load than some exec jets as well.
http://www.piaggioaerospace.it/AvantiEVO_VirtualTo...



Edited by Paul Drawmer on Friday 10th February 22:22

topsparks

1,202 posts

271 months

Friday 10th February 2017
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Noisy bloody thing, flies over our yard on approach to Northolt now and again, you can't mistake the distinctive whine it makes!

Lorne

543 posts

126 months

Sunday 24th March 2019
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Holy thread resurrection I know, but as the Beechcraft Starship has no airframe fatigue life limit, it's quite reasonable to resurrect a thread about it - as well as the plane itself.

Picking up on some of the comments;

The pusher design is actually more efficient in terms of fuel burn to thrust produced. Yes, the prop runs through wake air from the wing, but a variety of other efficiency gains outweigh that. I've yet to work out these to any degree of accuracy though as my normal engineering realm is -3,000 feet rather than +41,000. Putting the props behind the cabin also makes it quieter inside, but not necessarily outside.

The Starship died because it wasn't really any better than the Beechcraft King-Air it was suppose to replace, but it cost a lot more. Both were primarily because it was the first business plane to have an all carbon fibre body and wing. Beechcraft over designed it, as you do when you're the first at something new, and the FAA then added a load more requirements as they were nervy about certifying a 'plastic' plane, that made the airframe just as heavy as if it'd been made from metal. This is why it has no fatigue life limit, because it's so bloody strong, the stresses in the carbon fibre are tiny.

It was also the first plane to have a fully glass cockpit, where the tradition instruments are replaced by display panels. Being the early 90's though, the display panels were 14 cathode ray tube displays. They were very heavy and needed an awful lot of cooling fans. As that was all weight in the nose, it didn't help the C of G either.

Beechcraft did indeed buy back most of the 53 Starships they made before discontinuing the line. 6 I think were kept in private hands (4 in the US, 1 in Mexico and 1 in Germany) and a few more escaped the shredder by going to museums. I believe those in museums have their main spars drilled with big holes to prevent return to flying. I expect the men in suits at Beechcraft also shredded the moulds, so no Starship 2 will be coming from them.

However, in the world of 'what would I do if I had the money', the Starship is right up at the top of the list, refitted as follows:

Garmin 3000 avionics. This needs re-wiring the whole plane as the original avionics are integrated with the autopilot, but that's completely fine because of modification number 2
To use Jeremy Clarksons quote from the Grand Tour this week, 'the interior is a bit Birmingham spec', so out with the old metal and ruse leather seats and in with some CF framed ones and modern sound proofing to get it whisper quiet inside. Don't need 6 seats either, so drop a couple for more leg room and less weight.
The 1200 hp Pratt and Whitney turbo-prop is part of a family that now runs to 1700 hp with the same basic engine size, and we all know more power is simply better.
More power normally means faster prop speeds and more noise, but props have moved on as well, so off with the Hertzel 5 blade props and on with 7 or 9 blade CF scimitars. With this number of blades you actually have an open turbofan rather than a turbo-prop set up. Prop drag is higher, but the other efficiency gains from more blades out weigh that by a big margin.

So, Starship 2, with it's stunning looks, Burt Rutan genius design, 1000 lbs less weight, more thrust, ideal CofG, will probably cruise at something like 440 mph at 41,000 feet. Faster and higher than many light jets and burning a little over half the fuel, so a decent range and (in the realm of jets), low running costs.

All I need now is about £4.5m spare (a third for a Starship 1, a third to upgrade it and a third because it'll be a right bugger that'll go way over budget). Less than a new light jet, faster, more efficient, definitely way cooler, unlimited fatigue life and completely unique. In the world of man-maths it's a complete no-brainer!

edit: single pilot certified, so you can fly it yourself as and when you feel like it without having to hire a right hand seat

Edited by Lorne on Sunday 24th March 16:03