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Showing results for tags 'ovation'.
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From the album: GJ Flying
© Gunnar Jeannette
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From the album: GJ Flying
© Gunnar Jeannette
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From the album: GJ Flying
© Gunnar Jeannette
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From the album: GJ Flying
© Gunnar Jeannette
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From the album: GJ Flying
© Gunnar Jeannette
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From the album: GJ Flying
© Gunnar Jeannette
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From the album: GJ Flying
© Gunnar Jeannette
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From the album: GJ Flying
© Gunnar Jeannette
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From the album: GJ Flying
© Gunnar Jeannette
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From the album: GJ Flying
© Gunnar Jeannette
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From the album: GJ Flying
© Gunnar Jeannette
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From the album: GJ Flying
© Gunnar Jeannette
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From the album: GJ Flying
© Gunnar Jeannette
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From the album: GJ Flying
© Gunnar Jeannette
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From the album: GJ Flying
© Gunnar Jeannette
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From the album: GJ Flying
© Gunnar Jeannette
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From the album: GJ Flying
© Gunnar Jeannette
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From the album: GJ Flying
© Gunnar Jeannette
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Selling this winterization plate that came with my 2008 Ovation 2. Brand new. Never used. Asking $ 250 + shipping If interested please contact via email artemgrush@hotmail.com
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Looks like a new or like new set of heat shields window inserts. All nicely labeled for which window they go in and all stored in a spiffy new blue bag. I have two sets so don't need this one. Aircraft spruce sells this set for $250. I'm asking $125 and I'll pay shipping. glenn reynolds
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Has anyone else got one of these? I am guessing it is computer generated but still, a great heads up. Based on my JPI 830 flight files Savvy says my oil pressure is too high compared to the 2428 other flights by a cohort of 57 other M20 (S/R) aircraft. I run 65 psi in cruise. I went back and checked it has been this way since I got the plane. The POH says 30 - 100 psi on oil pressure but Continental IO-550-G specs say 30 - 60 psi Any thoughts?
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- oil pressure
- ovation
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Eric with Oasis Aviation in Willmar, Minnesota flew me to Flying Cloud airport after I left my 89 201 at Weep No More. I had never flown or been in an Ovation and saw this as a good opportunity to see what it was like. For a number of reasons that have been discussed here before, I LOVED what I saw in the Ovation. It has been said before that there is "No replacement for Displacement." I appreciated this experience. The downside is, even though my 201 has served me well, I see what I have been missing. Speed cost money. How fast can you afford to go?
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Yesterday I tested the Standby Alternator in my Ovation 2 29-0363 (905 hours TTIS) all according to the published procedure, and it failed. To track down the fault the top cowl was removed, the prop rotated by hand, and we found the alternator was not rotating, so the problem seems to be the shear coupling. Have any other readers experienced the shear coupling failure, and at what TTIS? Was the alternator replaced or overhauled with the shear key replacement? It seems that the alternator is essential for TKS equipped Ovations, but not essential for non TKS. I'm not overly confident flying with the standby U/S because the G1000 equipped Ovation 2 needs plently of power, but then I accumulate some 1000 hrs on my first Ovation 1 (29-0156) in some of the most remote areas of Australia without the luxury of a standby.
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- ovation
- alternator
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Hey everyone, Long time lurker, first time poster. I have been researching the purchase of a plane for years and will hopefully be able to make it a reality in the not too distant future. I am very interested in the Mooney lineup and have read a lot on the different models. This forum has been a great resource, thanks! My mission would be lots of local flights of 100nm or less with occasional (5-7x/year) longer cross country flights of around 5-600nm. I live in Vancouver Canada (so essentially the Pacific Northwest). I would love to make flights up and down the west coast but also have family one province over to the east. This would involve a flight over the Rockies. MEA for victor airways along that route are around 17000ft, but there are GPS routes slightly further south with MEAs of 13500ft so flights would have to be at a minimum of 14-15000ft depending on direction. Given this profile, how badly would you think a turbo is needed? It seems like it would be pushing it for an M20J but what about an Ovation. Ceiling is advertised at 20000ft. Is it reasonable to expect to safely be able to get up to 16-17000ft near gross weight with reasonable climb rates? Or would a turbo be the way to go? I’d appreciate any thoughts! Thanks in advance.
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moritz gauge cluster package is junk, cant get unit repair , dilemmas finding space to install approved replacement the JPI 930 is approved unit will require major panel revamp, 5.5 inches of space is a little too large for left side of panel, are there any other units that are approved as primary and use less space in panel, currently have a jpi monitor that about 3 inch's