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#1
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Towing w LSA (FAA defined Light Sport Aircraft)?
Is anyone doing this? Without a horsepower limit for Light Sport Aircraft it seems that a small airframe and a big engine might be an ideal towplane. The GW limit of 1320 lbs (599kg) and max cruise speed of 120knots do not seem restrictive for such a tug. Jeff Banks |
#2
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Is it legal to tow if you just have a light sport license? If not, what's
the point? Mike Schumann "Jeffrey Banks" wrote in message ... Towing w LSA (FAA defined Light Sport Aircraft)? Is anyone doing this? Without a horsepower limit for Light Sport Aircraft it seems that a small airframe and a big engine might be an ideal towplane. The GW limit of 1320 lbs (599kg) and max cruise speed of 120knots do not seem restrictive for such a tug. Jeff Banks |
#3
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The point is that an airplane can be designed that is optimized for aero
tow. This theoretical aircraft could deliver far better tow performance on half the HP of a Pawnee. It could be almost silent while using smaller quantities of cheaper fuel. I agree that it's possible within the limits of the Sport Light Aircraft regulations. We'll have to see if someone pick up the challenge. It's not the pilot, it's the airplane. Bill Daniels "Mike Schumann" wrote in message link.net... Is it legal to tow if you just have a light sport license? If not, what's the point? Mike Schumann "Jeffrey Banks" wrote in message ... Towing w LSA (FAA defined Light Sport Aircraft)? Is anyone doing this? Without a horsepower limit for Light Sport Aircraft it seems that a small airframe and a big engine might be an ideal towplane. The GW limit of 1320 lbs (599kg) and max cruise speed of 120knots do not seem restrictive for such a tug. Jeff Banks |
#4
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![]() "Mike Schumann" wrote in message link.net... Is it legal to tow if you just have a light sport license? If not, what's the point? Mike Schumann Private pilots can fly LSAs. Those people who are towing hang gliders are lobbying for towing with the experimental LSAs (the Dragonflys and so forth). If you could build an LSA similar to a Katana with 150 HP or so, I bet that could make a dandy towplane. LSAs don't have to go through a complete certification, so it's possible someone could design a towplane that would have lower fuel burn and faster cycle time than existing towplanes. It might even be able to double as a motorglider trainer when it wasn't towing. Tim Ward |
#5
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Jeffrey Banks wrote:
Without a horsepower limit for Light Sport Aircraft it seems that a small airframe and a big engine might be an ideal towplane. The GW limit of 1320 lbs (599kg) and max cruise speed of 120knots do not seem restrictive for such a tug. What do you consider a big engine? A new, lightened Piper Pawnee (currently mt wt of 1288 lbs) would be better than yet another high-wing lashup with horrible visibility from the cockpit. Jack |
#6
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Is anyone doing this?
In Europe, this is becoming more and more common. Towing works astonishingly well with 100 hp and one of those new planes. The limit is when the glider is very heavy (fully loaded two seater) or the runway is very short and soft. Towing with 3 gal/hour and with remarkably little noise is much cheaper and neighbour-friendlier, even if a tow it last 10% longer. There are currently two categories of "new tow planes": Motorgliders (such as the Super Dimona, in the USA called Katana XTreme) and modern ultalights, as they are called here (see for example http://www.remos.com/). All in all, in Europe we strongly believe that this is the future of towing. Stefan |
#7
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On Tue, 13 Sep 2005 09:29:17 +0200, Stefan wrote:
Is anyone doing this? In Europe, this is becoming more and more common. Towing works astonishingly well with 100 hp and one of those new planes. The limit is when the glider is very heavy (fully loaded two seater) or the runway is very short and soft. Towing with 3 gal/hour and with remarkably little noise is much cheaper and neighbour-friendlier, even if a tow it last 10% longer. When I visited the Wasserkuppe in 2003 they were using a Robin GR400 for their two-seat fleet (ASK-21) and a Pelikan UL for the single seaters. That's a reasonable tow-plane test: OK, they operate off tarmac, but launch is usually down-wind and down-hill so the tow plane needs to be fairly capable. -- martin@ | Martin Gregorie gregorie. | Essex, UK org | |
#8
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![]() "Stefan" wrote in message ... Is anyone doing this? In Europe, this is becoming more and more common. Towing works astonishingly well with 100 hp and one of those new planes. The limit is when the glider is very heavy (fully loaded two seater) or the runway is very short and soft. Towing with 3 gal/hour and with remarkably little noise is much cheaper and neighbour-friendlier, even if a tow it last 10% longer. There are currently two categories of "new tow planes": Motorgliders (such as the Super Dimona, in the USA called Katana XTreme) and modern ultalights, as they are called here (see for example http://www.remos.com/). All in all, in Europe we strongly believe that this is the future of towing. Stefan I don't believe an optimum design tow plane would look anything like a touring motorglider. The key to performance and economy is the propeller. It should be really big and slow turning. Remember, propeller blades are just rotating wings. They work best at the L/D max just like a sailplane. Think of a three to four meter diameter prop turning at 1000 RPM. The touring motorglider airframes won't accommodate a prop that big. I'm thinking of something that would look like an oversize ultralight with the pilot way forward for the best view and a pusher prop over a low wing. The wing would baffle what little sound the prop made so it should be very quiet. A very slow prop could be easily driven with a tooth belt. 130 HP should be more than enough for the heaviest 20 meter two-seater. A water cooled Honda or Subaru engine might work great. Bill Daniels |
#9
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The Pik 27 looks as if it is getting close to completion.
It is a small single seat low wing Rotax 914 engined machine with rear fuselage air brakes that has been designed specifically as a glider tug and is expected to outperform a Pawnee for towing and be much more economical. See: http://www.windcraft.fi/pik27/welcome John Galloway At 13:00 13 September 2005, Bill Daniels wrote: 'Stefan' wrote in message ... Is anyone doing this? In Europe, this is becoming more and more common. Towing works astonishingly well with 100 hp and one of those new planes. The limit is when the glider is very heavy (fully loaded two seater) or the runway is very short and soft. Towing with 3 gal/hour and with remarkably little noise is much cheaper and neighbour-friendlier, even if a tow it last 10% longer. There are currently two categories of 'new tow planes': Motorgliders (such as the Super Dimona, in the USA called Katana XTreme) and modern ultalights, as they are called here (see for example http://www.remos.com/). All in all, in Europe we strongly believe that this is the future of towing. Stefan I don't believe an optimum design tow plane would look anything like a touring motorglider. The key to performance and economy is the propeller. It should be really big and slow turning. Remember, propeller blades are just rotating wings. They work best at the L/D max just like a sailplane. Think of a three to four meter diameter prop turning at 1000 RPM. The touring motorglider airframes won't accommodate a prop that big. I'm thinking of something that would look like an oversize ultralight with the pilot way forward for the best view and a pusher prop over a low wing. The wing would baffle what little sound the prop made so it should be very quiet. A very slow prop could be easily driven with a tooth belt. 130 HP should be more than enough for the heaviest 20 meter two-seater. A water cooled Honda or Subaru engine might work great. Bill Daniels |
#10
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I've long thought an experimental category A/C dedicated only to towing
would be a good alternative to the Pawnee. The correct design would get better fuel efficiency, be quieter, have longer TBO and probably be liquid cooled so thermal shock is not such a problem on let down. Two questions, though: who wants to design a specialized airplane with such limited market potential, and what would the insurance companies say about towing with an A/C in the experimental category? Otherwise, bring it on! Fred |
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