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#1
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I am considering the purchase of an ASH 25e. One of the concerns is
our operating field. On some days a Nimbus 3t with 25.5 m tips things can be a little marginal if the ship is at max T/O weight. How does the ASH 25 compare if flown empty but 2 up? We are operating off a 'lush' grass field generally behind a 235 hp Pawnee or a 185 ( I think ) supercub. The marginal takeoffs are generally behind the supercub on the occasional days we change take off direction and are faced with an initial roll uphill with trees at the far threshold. |
#2
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On Feb 17, 11:55*am, nimbusgb wrote:
I am considering the purchase of an ASH 25e. One of the concerns is our operating field. On some days a Nimbus 3t with 25.5 m tips things can be a little marginal if the ship is at max T/O weight. How does the ASH 25 compare if flown empty but 2 up? The ASH-25e indicates a sustainer engine of only 25 hp. Don't think you want to try using it for takeoff, although I'm told it has self launched with only one pilot and a down-hill runway. The straight 25 (no engine and 2 pilots) is near equal to the Nimbus 3 with water. Our 25e with engine removed and 2 pilots came in about 1600 lbs. JJ We are operating off a 'lush' grass field generally behind a 235 hp Pawnee or a 185 ( I think ) supercub. The marginal takeoffs are generally behind the supercub on the occasional days we change take off direction and are faced with an initial roll uphill with trees at the far threshold. |
#3
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![]() The ASH-25e indicates a sustainer engine of only 25 hp. Don't think you want to try using it for takeoff, lol! Wasn't intending too! The straight 25 (no engine and 2 pilots) is near equal to the Nimbus 3 with water. Our 25e with engine removed and 2 pilots came in about 1600 lbs. JJ Both the nimbus 3 and ASH 25's have MAUW's of 750kg. The ASH(e) is about 40kg heavier empty so in theory we are talking something like the equivalent of a Nimbus 3 with about 75l of water on board if it has two 'average' pilots in it |
#4
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On Feb 18, 7:16*am, nimbusgb wrote:
The ASH-25e indicates a sustainer engine of only 25 hp. Don't think you want to try using it for takeoff, lol! Wasn't intending too! The straight 25 (no engine and 2 pilots) is near equal to the Nimbus 3 with water. Our 25e with engine removed and 2 pilots came in about 1600 lbs. JJ Both the nimbus 3 and ASH 25's have MAUW's of 750kg. The ASH(e) is about 40kg heavier empty so in theory we are talking something like the equivalent of a Nimbus 3 with about 75l of water on board if it has two 'average' pilots in it I misunderstood your question, we launched regularly from a 2500 foot (sea-level) runway behind a Pawnee without any problem. Have done it (solo) behind a Citabria at 2600 MSL, but had much more runway available. Hope this helps, I loved the 25, right after it got airborne..........didn't like putting it together or shoving it around on the ground, much! Takeoff is tricky becaust she sits nose high and the wing is completely stalled for the first 200 feet. We developed a procedure where we didn't touch the ailerons or rudder, just let it roll. If a wing came down it would usually stay about a foot above the ground and not drag. Trying to lift it before we had a good 20 knots would insure a hard down wing drag. JJ |
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JJ Sinclair wrote:
On Feb 18, 7:16 am, nimbusgb wrote: The ASH-25e indicates a sustainer engine of only 25 hp. Don't think you want to try using it for takeoff, lol! Wasn't intending too! The straight 25 (no engine and 2 pilots) is near equal to the Nimbus 3 with water. Our 25e with engine removed and 2 pilots came in about 1600 lbs. JJ Both the nimbus 3 and ASH 25's have MAUW's of 750kg. The ASH(e) is about 40kg heavier empty so in theory we are talking something like the equivalent of a Nimbus 3 with about 75l of water on board if it has two 'average' pilots in it I misunderstood your question, we launched regularly from a 2500 foot (sea-level) runway behind a Pawnee without any problem. Have done it (solo) behind a Citabria at 2600 MSL, but had much more runway available. Hope this helps, I loved the 25, right after it got airborne..........didn't like putting it together or shoving it around on the ground, much! Takeoff is tricky becaust she sits nose high and the wing is completely stalled for the first 200 feet. We developed a procedure where we didn't touch the ailerons or rudder, just let it roll. If a wing came down it would usually stay about a foot above the ground and not drag. Trying to lift it before we had a good 20 knots would insure a hard down wing drag. JJ Would stick *toward* the low wing help bring it up at very low speed? Shawn |
#6
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Shawn wrote:
If a wing came down it would usually stay about a foot above the ground and not drag. Trying to lift it before we had a good 20 knots would insure a hard down wing drag. JJ Would stick *toward* the low wing help bring it up at very low speed? I actually tried that on an RS-15 with non-interconnected ailerons. It worked. But you had to know exactly when to revert to normal. After installing an interconnect, where the ailerons reflexed with the flaps, the problem went away. -- Regards, Doug -- Posted via a free Usenet account from http://www.teranews.com |
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