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Possible new canard


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This was in Kitplanes earlier this year (I forget whether it was plans or a kit). Since the builder/designer went through the trouble to get into Kitplanes, I figured we should cheer him on.

 

http://www.saci.us/dart.htm

 

Looking up the N-number, it first flew in 1995. I recall from the Kitplanes listing that it's powered by a VW 2100cc engine.

Jon Matcho :busy:
Builder & Canard Zone Admin
Now:  Rebuilding Quickie Tri-Q200 N479E
Next:  Resume building a Cozy Mark IV

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  • 10 months later...

Parrish dart, by Jim Parrish.

 

About 4 years ago a good friend of mine quit his job and moved to Florida to apprentice on the Dart. The idea was he'd work with Jim on a thunder mustang being built for a client during the day, and in the evenings and weekends work on the dart.

 

He was there for a couple of months. In that time he figures he did about 2 hours of work on the Dart while he was there. He came back to LA, he's flying a Velocity now.

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Thanks for the update Richard,

Any idea how much airtime it has seen and how it flys?

He is selling the plans for $500 US (that's alot more expensive in AU $s). I can't imagine that people will be willing to fork out the readys for an unproven design with doubtful support.

The design "looks" good, but does it fly well, to what speed and fuel rates, and is it SAFE? Id appreciate your or anyone elses thoughts,

 

Cheers,

 

Bruce.

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  • 2 months later...

Hi Richard,

 

any other info on the Dart at all? Does anyone know how many hours it racked up before being out of service, or anything of its performance? Is it using the LEz canard/wing combo?

 

I think the fuse' design looks quite good, but if the whole package doesn't work.............. well.........

 

Cheers,

 

Bruce.

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Any idea what caused the accident at all? Stall, engine trouble, heavy landing............? I wonder how the strip molded fuse' held up to the impact?

Any references that I could follow-up to the nature of the accident would be appreciated.

 

Thanks,

 

Bruce.

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Any idea what caused the accident at all? Stall, engine trouble, heavy landing............? I wonder how the strip molded fuse' held up to the impact?

Any references that I could follow-up to the nature of the accident would be appreciated.

 

Thanks,

 

Bruce.

That's all the information that I have.

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Any idea what caused the accident at all? Stall, engine trouble, heavy landing............?

According to Richard, it's not using the Long-EZ wing or canard. Those are enough variables for me to not consider this design out until there are a half-dozen or so flying. What's its benefit over a Long-EZ anyway? Looks? I gather it's supposed to have a faster build time than a Long-EZ, but I'm not convinced by the pics on the web site.

 

I wonder how the strip molded fuse' held up to the impact?

There's nothing wrong with this technique for making the fuselage (or turtleback, cowlings, etc...), provided the entire system (glass+epoxy+foam) is built to the same specifications as, say, a Long-EZ. The result can be stronger (or not) than a Long-EZ.

 

I can understand the motivation behind changing the build technique and/or sequence for a Long-EZ (to build it more quickly), but you're in the warning zone when you start swapping airfoils and playing with all the other variables.

 

Any references that I could follow-up to the nature of the accident would be appreciated.

AFAICT the accident was not reported to the FAA as I cannot find it in the NTSB database.

 

If you want to build a tandem canard, check out the Open-EZ.

Jon Matcho :busy:
Builder & Canard Zone Admin
Now:  Rebuilding Quickie Tri-Q200 N479E
Next:  Resume building a Cozy Mark IV

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According to Richard, it's not using the Long-EZ wing or canard. Those are enough variables for me to not consider this design out until there are a half-dozen or so flying. .

There are some risky decisions that a person can make selecting a homebuilt. One of the classics is being the first in line to buy a new kit. Even if the prototype flies fine, a new kit will have unexpected bugs in it that will make it more difficult to build. The early Berkuts had problems with the lower ends of their gear legs. You can count on there being problems like that.

 

A bad decision is to pick an airplane when the prototype has never flown.

 

A really bad decision is to pick an airplane where the prototype has flown once and scared the test pilot so badly he won't fly it again. See: Dreamwings. Or the pilot who test flew the "Redbird" modification of the Cessna 177 - "I hope this thing will climb high enough that we can jump out of it."

 

A really, REALLY bad decision is to pick an airplane when the prototype crashed on it's first flight for reasons that are not well understood and have not been corrected.

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I once read something about the early days of the BD-5. I don't know if it's true. It said that the original short wing version was so difficult to fly that the first 4 airplanes had all crashed on takeoff, and 2 of the 4 pilots had been killed.

 

I read that and thought, OK, what was pilot #4 thinking as he opened the throttle?

 

It doesn't cost anything to be listed in the Kitplanes guide. If you have a listing and you sell an info-pack, you're in the black already. It's like, it doesn't cost anything to have a website. So you get stuff like this http://www.skywalkerjets.com and this http://www.independentaircraft.com and even this http://www.tronguy.net Having a website doesn't mean you have something that works. Neither does having a listing in a sport plane guide.

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  • 2 weeks later...
  • 5 months later...

Here's a picture of a jet powered glider I saw/heard fly at the LOE fly-in this year.

 

http://cozyworld.net/photos/land_of_enchanment_2006/picture46.aspx

Jet Glider 1

 

http://cozyworld.net/photos/land_of_enchanment_2006/picture47.aspx

Jet Glider 2

 

Bob

Bob Hassel

Cozy Plans #749

Santa Fe, NM

 

http://www.cozyworld.net

http://www.hassel-usa.com

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