Aerobatic Beech
Musketeer fight test
by
Budd Davisson
Does the top of
a radar blip look the same as the bottom? If
a blip has a top and a bottom, I wonder what
Wichita Centre thought when they saw a blip
over by Augusta doing four-point flip-flops
and generally behaving like a waterbug. It's
really weird to be squawking ident. inverted!
The world needs
another 140-mph, four-place airplane like it
needs another navel, especially when it
costs $20,000. What the world really needs
is the perfect compromise-a cross-country
chariot capable of going from here to there
in great comfort, and still have a little
spirit, a little romance. Most of general
aviation's-wonder wagons have gadgets
that'll make your lunch and hold your hand
while guiding you down the glide slope. Most
of general aviation's machines also have all
the dash and inherent excitement of a '49
Buick Dynaflow. They're about as sporty as a
fire hydrant. The Custom Musketeer is
Beech's attempt at compromising, it's their
contribution towards keeping fun in flying.
It's a curious
notion, making a cross-country akro ship. At
least it's unusual on this side of the
Atlantic puddle. In Europe aerobatics isn't
a dirty ten letter word and most of their
ships have at least limited akro
capabilities. It's only recently that
aerobatics has gained respectability here.
Any doubts of impending social acceptance
for aerobatics should be quickly erased by
knowing that Beech has a piece of the
action. Beechcraft isn't known for an
adventurous approach to aviation. They don't
stick their neck out. They don't have to . .
. they're hard-core Establishment and proud
of it. The name Beechcraft whittled into the
side of an airplane is, and has been, a
guarantee of top quality, good performance,
and predictable high prices ("It costs so
little more to own the very best."), and
they aren't going to play the aerobat game
unless there's a stake that makes it
worthwhile.
Basically the
Musketeer is a trainer, and anywhere but in
the hallowed halls of Beechcraft, the word
"trainer" is another way of saying economy,
expendable, small, simple, and cheap. These
are words that Beechcraft doesn't even know
how to pronounce, so their trainer popped
out of it's aluminium womb, fully dressed in
its Sunday threads and waving the Beechcraft
banner like a VFW matron at a picnic. It was
full grown, and a far cry from a cut-corner
approach to training. If there is such a
thing as too much of a good thing, the
Musketeer was it. It was too elegant, too
complicated, too big, and too expensive. The
end result is that it runs a poor third to
the 150 and Cherokee in actual numbers in
use. It's not that it wasn't, or isn't a
good trainer . . . it's too good. It's a
silver plated hammer in a trade where the
carpenters only need a garden variety
Stanley or Plumb.
It's been two
years now since Beech took one of their
Musketeer trainers, nailed in a set of
shoulder harnesses, a quick release door,
splashed on a sun-burst, and called it
aerobatic, but 1970 may be the year that it
really makes the grade. Not much has been
done to the 1970 Musketeer to set it apart
from its predecessor. Some interior
appointments, a few nuts and bolts here and
there, but the major change has been in the
marketing department's approach to it. In
the past the Akro Musketeer has been the
bottom of a mighty tall totem pole, but the
fantastic growth in sports aviation has been
noticed by even the stuffiest of executives,
and they've decided to give the runt of the
Beechcraft litter a higher priority and help
push it on it's way. The job of head
Musketeer pusher falls to Bob Beutgenbach,
who was my host during my brief, but
exciting sojourn in Beechcraft country.
Bob gave me a
short rundown on the Musketeer and its
construction. Very little had to be changed
or beefed up to make the akro version strong
enough to take the push and pull of
aerobatics and qualify it to aerobatic
category. The centre-section combines steel
tube and stressed skin, and the original
design was more than strong enough, which
says a lot for Beech design philosophy.
I had never
flown, or even looked at, a Musketeer in my
life, and several things surprised me. The
first was the size of the ailerons-they're
huge! I checked a normal Musketeer and found
they all have the same big flippers. It's a
characteristic of the breed. Also, I guess
I'd never noticed that it had a stabilator
instead of a regular stabilizer/elevator. It
was going to be interesting to see how the
stabilator reacted in aerobatics.
Walking around
the bird we checked for anything that might
fall off once we started twisting her tail.
Since we were going to ask a lot more of her
than a level X-C, we were particularly
careful looking over the tail and motor
mounts. The tail fittings are just a little
hard to see, and the new fiberglass cowl
makes inspecting motor mounts a chore too.
This was a Custom Aerobatic Musketeer, which
means it has a 180-hp Lycoming to drag it
around, rather than the usual 150-hp.
As low winged
airplanes go, the Musketeer is quite easy to
mount. The door is big enough to be
ridiculous, and there is no need to swing in
while grasping the cabin top, ala P-51, nor
is there any reason to crawl in head first
and turn around like a puppy fluffing up his
blanket.
The shoulder
harnesses pivot through a fitting on the
cabin roof behind the occupants' heads, and
are designed more for holding you back; than
down. I much prefer the old military type
that have nearly a 90 degree angle over the
shoulders, so that they crush you into the
seat, if you pull them too tight. The
Musketeer won't run inverted, but if they
ever modify it so it can run around on it's
back, I hope they change the harness
accordingly. A good set of shoulder
harnesses makes all inverted manoeuvres a
lot more fun.
Beech also
depends on one seat belt to keep your noggin
off the headliner. Almost all the aerobatics
the Musketeer is approved for can be done
without a seat belt, if they're done right,
because they are all positive G manoeuvres,
but I doubt if there is an aerobatic
neophyte living that hasn't pushed too hard
in a roll and slammed himself up against the
seat belt. For that reason, I'd also like to
see either two belts, or a big hairy
military type. The big belt should be there
to help cover up mistakes.
As soon as you
fire it up, the first thing you notice is
the vertical tachometer presentation. A
little pointer runs up and own a column of
numbers similar to some automotive
speedometers of a few years back. It doesn't
take long to get used to, but it fouls you
up when you glance at it for a quick
reading.
Takeoff and
climb are completely normal because the bird
is a basic airplane and flies like one.
Nothing exotic or demanding. It breaks
ground with very little urging from the
control column and climbs out at a
respectable 1,000-fpm. The immediate feeling
I noticed was one of solid comfort.
Everything is in the right place, the seats
feel great, the panel is plushness
personified, and the rams-horn wheels feel
like they were custom moulded to my hand.
It's so much easier to control an airplane
when you feel at home in it, and we weren't
ten feet off the ground before I felt that
way. I couldn't get over the feeling of the
control wheels. I guess I'm overly sensitive
to the way they fit, but since that's your
primary contact with the airplane, it should
be as natural as possible. The wheels are
sculptured so that they bulge where your
hand is hollow and shrink where your hand is
full, and a small, well shaped protrusion
supports your thumb. It feels very much like
the grips on an Olympic-type target pistol.
I was
immediately surprised at how the controls
themselves felt. Just standing back and
looking at a Musketeer you'd think it would
be a slightly Dumbo feeling Detroit-like
airplane, but it's not. The ailerons are
unbelievably smooth and extremely light for
this type of airplane. They don't rate with
Zlins or Jungmeisters, but they are better
than the Cardinal's, and the Cardinal's are
good.
As soon as we
got out to the practice area, I pulled a few
tight 360s, clearing the area and looking
for company. Finding none, I rolled out over
a road, pulling the nose gently up to a 30
degree pitch attitude, slowly rolling her
over on her back, bleeding off airspeed so
I'd be slow enough to do a split-S. As the
horizon levelled out upside down, I let the
nose fall and the speed build, pulling up
into one of the smoothest aileron rolls I've
ever done. It wasn't me that was smooth, it
was the airplane. At 140-mph and 20 degrees
nose high, those big, fat ailerons reach out
and effortlessly ease the airplane around
its longitudinal axis. Even though I feel
awkward (and illegal) doing aerobatics with
a wheel, the control wheel travel didn't
bother me at all. Most other aerobatic ships
with wheels demand that you practically
wring their neck to make it go around, but
the Musketeer whips right around with less
than 90 degree wheel deflection. I didn't
care what else it did, or how well, because
rolls were definitely going to be its strong
point.
Bob told me to
loop it from about 150-mph and use a two and
a half G entry. I dropped the nose and had
150-mph instantly, it picks up speed pronto
(just like a Beechcraft), and hauled back on
the wheel. As the wheel comes back, the
stick (oops, wheel) forces get higher and
higher. The wing pivoted around the horizon
like it was supposed to, and when I saw the
ground again, I eased off the power and
checked the G meter. Two Gs! I did it again,
this time using two hands, and finally got
the recommended two and a half on the G
meter. The servo tab (the small surface
running across the trailing edge of the
horizontal tail) is there to add resistance,
because a stabilator has none of its own and
it would be possible for a pilot to over
control it. The servo tab gives the pilot
more of a feel of what he's doing . . . the
more he deflects the stabilator, the more
the servo tab resists. I think they are
going to have to change the servo tab
linkage to reduce its movement because I was
one pooped pilot, after fighting the servo
tab through a few loops.
It snaps like
crazy! The first one caught me with my
britches down and I recovered a quarter turn
too late. The entries aren't really sharp
unless you use aileron with the back stick,
then it leaps around and you have to lead
recovery a good bit. I was really surprised.
I think I expected it to snap like a
Greyhound bus.
I never did get
a really good Immelmann. For some reason or
other it always runs out of steam just as
you start to roll out inverted. At first I
thought it wasn't enough speed, so 1 used a
higher entry speed, which helped, but they
still weren't clean. By doing a half snap on
top, it would do really crisp ones, but they
still weren't correct. I've no doubt that
practice would produce good Immelmanns, but
we didn't have the time.
At least one
other stabilator equipped trainer exhibits a
dangerous spin characteristic in that it
doesn't have enough elevator to hold it
stalled in the spin. The result is that
after a turn or so, it translates into a
tight spiral, with no change in attitude and
no warning other than a skyrocketing
airspeed. Several times I spun the Musketeer
through three turns, and found that as long
as you bear-hugged the control column to
your chest and kept it all the way back it
did a completely normal spin. It was going
around fast as blazes, but it was still
normal. If you relaxed on the wheel one tiny
bit, the airspeed would start up and you
were in a graveyard spiral instead of a
spin. When that happens, in a Musketeer or
anything else, you'd better recover quick
because red line is only a second or two
away and the ground is just a little ways
past that.
Before we
headed back to the barn, l did a clover leaf
and found to my surprise that it lost no
altitude. To any of you deprived individuals
who don't do aerobatics, a clover leaf is
four loops, back to back, but you do a
quarter vertical roll in the entry to each
of them, which means each loop starts over
the same point, but is ninety degrees to the
last one. I'd pull the nose up until the
wing was at right angles to the horizon,
roll until the wing sat on a point ninety
degrees from where I started, and pull it
over into a loop. It's a fun manoeuvre to do
and the Musketeer does it as well as any
aerobatic trainer I've ever been in, and
better than most.
Aerobatically
speaking, the Akro Musketeer is quite a good
airplane, it's surprisingly good. As a
trainer it might have a few minor drawbacks,
the biggest of which is the fact that it
will pick up speed like the proverbial
greased crowbar. It looks like the
instructor would have to really ride herd on
his students during the first couple rolls,
and such, to make sure he doesn't
accidentally split-S out. If you let this
thing run downhill for just a second,
inverted, it'd hit red line faster than you
can think about it. On the other hand, it
rolls so nicely it should be no problem
teaching even the most club-footed student
rolling recoveries. I think I'd work on
unusual attitude recovery pretty early in a
student's aerobatic career to keep him out
of trouble, which is smart in any airplane.
As a plaything,
the Aerobatic Custom Musketeer is expensive,
no doubt about it. As a cross-country tool,
however, it's not bad, and its 140-mph plus
cruise makes it mighty useful. It's plush,
it's comfortable, it's sexy, and it can do
rolls, which makes it positively groovy.
Aerobatics is the other half of flying, it's
the half that completes your training as a
pilot, and makes you a real flyer instead of
a driver. Unfortunately, in the past it took
one type of airplane to do the right side up
half, and another type to do the wrong side
up part. I think it's darned considerate of
Beechcraft to come up with one airplane
that's good at both, the Aerobatic Custom
Musketeer 1970.
|