![]() |
If this is your first visit, be sure to check out the FAQ by clicking the link above. You may have to register before you can post: click the register link above to proceed. To start viewing messages, select the forum that you want to visit from the selection below. |
|
|
|
Thread Tools | Display Modes |
#1
|
|||
|
|||
![]()
One friendly and generous T-18 builder let me sit in his standard T-18
down at SNF. I'm 6'2" and had thought I wouldn't have enough leg room. Boy was I surprised! turns out, I had more than enough leg room. The main thing that was tight was the fact the plane I sat in was the original fuselage, with the 38" width. The wide body version with the 40" cabin width would be fine. The headroom was tight with the canopy closed, I had to tilt my head forward, but the builder, who was a bit short, said he had a 5 inch thick seat cushion on the seat bottom. With a 2" cushion of temperfoam, I would have had enough room. I sure do like the look of the T-18, more than the Van's designs. But that's just a personal preferance. I just can't get past that big rectangular wing. Reminds me of an old Hershey bar winged Cherokee. Another T-18 builder told me that it's basically a dying design. The folding wing of both the T-18 and the Mustang II appeal to me. But the t-18 owner said he knew of no one that actually folded his wings and towed their airplane home. So maybe that idea isn't as practical in actual practice as in theory. And with a 180hp engine, the T-18 owner said he couldn't do a full power runup with the stick all the way back, without the tail coming off the ground. Seems the 180hp T-18's are a bit nose heavy, especially with a constant speed prop. I've noticed in accident reports, nose overs are the most common occurance. One reason is probably that the gear is swept back, and as the nose rotates down, the gear moves aft, making the situation worse. Van's have the same geomety. The Mustang II, with the gear swept forward has the advantage on that one. But the approach speed of the T-18 and M-II are a lot higher than a Van's. So short runways are out with those. |
#2
|
|||
|
|||
![]() "Sliker" wrote One friendly and generous T-18 builder let me sit in his standard T-18 down at SNF. I'm 6'2" and had thought I wouldn't have enough leg room. Boy was I surprised! turns out, I had more than enough leg room. The main thing that was tight was the fact the plane I sat in was the original fuselage, with the 38" width. The wide body version with the 40" cabin width would be fine. Say what? The 38" cabin is not wide enough, but if you have a two inch wide cabin, then you get one inch more, and the passenger gets 1 inch more, that is enough? I'm surprised that 1/2" extra on each elbow and/or hip is enough to even notice. Of all the things wrong with small airplanes, the lack of width is what I would say is most wrong. I don't mind cuddling up with my sweetie, but for hour on end, sometimes hot sweaty, tired and irritable? Nope. Of course, then we are talking about the guy you though would enjoy going flying with you, and rubbing elbows with you for a few hours. NOT!!! Really, is a few more inches going to kill your speed all that much more? Would it really matter, most of the time? It isn't like a few more inches in width is going to destroy the mission of the plane, is it? So it goes a few knots slower. Big deal, I say. Cripes sake, even a VW bug has it way over on about everything out there, in the width department. It even beats the pants off of most of the 6 and 8 place, 1 million dollar and more airplanes, in the elbow room department! Does anyone else feel this way, or am I on my own with this pet peeve? You can be darn sure if I design my own, it will be wider than 98% of the offerings out there, today. -- Jim in NC |
#3
|
|||
|
|||
![]()
"Sliker" wrote in message
... ... practice as in theory. And with a 180hp engine, the T-18 owner said he couldn't do a full power runup with the stick all the way back, without the tail coming off the ground. Seems the 180hp T-18's are a bit nose heavy, especially with a constant speed prop. I've noticed in accident reports, nose overs are the most common occurance. One reason ... Personally, the 180 hp is a bit of an overkill for a T-18 if you want my opinion... They will also tend to end up well over John Thorp's design gross weight. Take a look at http://www.t18.net/resources.htm if you havn't already. If you put a lot of attention into the details, you can do pretty darn good on a little old O-290 - see http://www.t18.net/resources/T-18%20orig%20hdbk.doc for some extensive performance data in the middle (I know the builder real well and I believe his numbers. ) -- Geoff The Sea Hawk at Wow Way d0t Com remove spaces and make the obvious substitutions to reply by mail When immigration is outlawed, only outlaws will immigrate. |
#4
|
|||
|
|||
![]()
On 2008-04-12, Morgans wrote:
Of all the things wrong with small airplanes, the lack of width is what I would say is most wrong. Not all small aircraft are that narrow. The Zodiac's 44-inch cabin and seats are as wide as a pair of first class seats on a Northwest A320 or DC-9, and that's plenty wide for two. -- Jay Maynard, K5ZC http://www.conmicro.com http://jmaynard.livejournal.com http://www.tronguy.net Fairmont, MN (FRM) (Yes, that's me!) AMD Zodiac CH601XLi N55ZC (ordered 17 March, delivery 2 June) |
#5
|
|||
|
|||
![]()
On Sat, 12 Apr 2008 22:56:52 GMT, Jay Maynard
wrote: On 2008-04-12, Morgans wrote: Of all the things wrong with small airplanes, the lack of width is what I would say is most wrong. Not all small aircraft are that narrow. The Zodiac's 44-inch cabin and seats are as wide as a pair of first class seats on a Northwest A320 or DC-9, and that's plenty wide for two. -- Jay Maynard, K5ZC http://www.conmicro.com http://jmaynard.livejournal.com http://www.tronguy.net Fairmont, MN (FRM) (Yes, that's me!) AMD Zodiac CH601XLi N55ZC (ordered 17 March, delivery 2 June) Yeah my rebel is 44" wide too. Lots of room between the seats for the float hydraulics pump handle and the water rudder retract cable. If you both have shoulders like linebackers the seats move far enough back that the passenger can have his shoulders behind the pilot Or just choose a tandem design any that I've sat in have tons of elbow room for 1 |
#6
|
|||
|
|||
![]()
"Morgans" wrote:
.... Of all the things wrong with small airplanes, the lack of width is what I would say is most wrong. .... Really, is a few more inches going to kill your speed all that much more? Would it really matter, most of the time? It isn't like a few more inches in width is going to destroy the mission of the plane, is it? So it goes a few knots slower. Big deal, I say. Agreed on all counts. Does anyone else feel this way, or am I on my own with this pet peeve? You aren't alone. |
#7
|
|||
|
|||
![]() "Jim Logajan" wrote Does anyone else feel this way, or am I on my own with this pet peeve? You aren't alone. For a while, I thought I was crazy, for the comments coming in. I'm glad to see someone else agree. I'm not that big of a guy either, at 5'11", and right at an "official" FAA person's weight of 175! I was a bit more than official, but got down to fit in the FAA idea of ideal. g -- Jim in NC |
#8
|
|||
|
|||
![]()
"Morgans" wrote in message
... "Jim Logajan" wrote Does anyone else feel this way, or am I on my own with this pet peeve? You aren't alone. For a while, I thought I was crazy, for the comments coming in. I'm glad to see someone else agree. I'm not that big of a guy either, at 5'11", and right at an "official" FAA person's weight of 175! I was a bit more than official, but got down to fit in the FAA idea of ideal. g -- Jim in NC You are not alone at all, and I would not be at all surprised to find that the miserable amount of space in most light aircraft might be a large part of the pilot recruitment problem. Most of the RV series are 43" cabin width, about the same as a Piper Tomahawk, which is tolerable; but needs improvement. While I'm on a rant about the lousy accomodations, I am 6'1" and only slightly above that 175 pound target weight (but I'm working on it g); which brings me to a couple of additional complaints. Most of the high wing light airplanes have poor visibility, especially for most people taller than about 5'9" and actually seem to be getting worse. In addition, egress is awkward from many of the newer low wing designs--especially when you consider that most "customers" are at least middle aged when they are ready to buy. I watched the sales chick demonstrating how to exit one of them (I think it was the Europa derivative--possibly a Liberty at the LSA Expo) and I have to laugh about what a wife or girl friend might have to say. It seems that the perferred method was to slide your fanny sideways and back out onto the wing walk, rock back and pull your feet out, swivel on your fanny (the sales chick was not wearing white), and then slide off the leading edge of the wing. No wonder that I looked awkward, even though I work out, when I tried to exit in the same way that I used to exit a Tomahawk! Clearly, much improvement is deperately needed. Peter |
#9
|
|||
|
|||
![]()
In a previous article, "Morgans" said:
Really, is a few more inches going to kill your speed all that much more? Would it really matter, most of the time? It isn't like a few more inches in width is going to destroy the mission of the plane, is it? So it goes a few knots slower. Big deal, I say. Cripes sake, even a VW bug has it way over on about everything out there, in the width department. It even beats the pants off of most of the 6 and 8 place, 1 million dollar and more airplanes, in the elbow room department! That's why I was so sad when our flying club sold our Piper Lance - the PA32R cabin is quite a bit wider than the PA28 cabin, wide enough that I could put my flight bag down between the seats. It meant my wife and I didn't knock elbows for the entire flight. -- Paul Tomblin http://blog.xcski.com/ "Orcs killed: none. Disappointing. Stubble update: I look rugged and manly. Yes! Keep wanting to drop-kick Gimli. Holding myself back. Still not King." - the very secret diary of Aragorn son of Arathron |
#10
|
|||
|
|||
![]()
A 180 does seem like a big engine in that little T-18. If I did put
that much power in one, I'd use something like a Prince prop, which is made from wood, and light. A 180 with a constant speed is a lot of weight to hang on the nose of that little plane. Another thing about the T-18 I'm not wild about is the nose section taper. The sides of the nose taper inward, a design left over from the original idea of the T-18 being open cockpit and having it's cylinders hanging in the breeze, like a J-3's. When it was discovered the plane was too fast for open cockpit, and open cylinders, a canopy was installed and "cheeks" put over the cylinders sticking out. But what should have been done then, was to straighten out the sides of the nose, like an RV 6 or 7. Which would have eliminated the cheeks stuck on the side of the cowling, and provided more room in the forward part of the cockpit, where your feet are. I can't imagine that plane ever being an open cockpit. What was John thinking!? I remember something he wrote that said when they flew it open cockpit, if felt like it would suck you right out of it. So that idea was abandonned early. I guess John just didn't want to go back to the drawing board and draw all new plans for the entire nose section. Another thing one T-18 owner said at SNF was when John designed the T-18, he was thinking in terms of the FAA's 170 lb pilot. But if he had known, the reality is, most guys are upper middle age by the time they finish one, and many have the usual spare tire, and need more than a 38" cockpit width, even 40" is barely enough. 44" should be the minimum for side by side planes. My Glasair 3 is 42", which I think is a bit tight for 2 big guys. On Sat, 12 Apr 2008 18:11:16 -0400, "Capt. Geoffrey Thorpe" The Sea Hawk At Wow Way D0t C0m wrote: "Sliker" wrote in message .. . ... practice as in theory. And with a 180hp engine, the T-18 owner said he couldn't do a full power runup with the stick all the way back, without the tail coming off the ground. Seems the 180hp T-18's are a bit nose heavy, especially with a constant speed prop. I've noticed in accident reports, nose overs are the most common occurance. One reason ... Personally, the 180 hp is a bit of an overkill for a T-18 if you want my opinion... They will also tend to end up well over John Thorp's design gross weight. Take a look at http://www.t18.net/resources.htm if you havn't already. If you put a lot of attention into the details, you can do pretty darn good on a little old O-290 - see http://www.t18.net/resources/T-18%20orig%20hdbk.doc for some extensive performance data in the middle (I know the builder real well and I believe his numbers. ) |
|
Thread Tools | |
Display Modes | |
|
|
![]() |
||||
Thread | Thread Starter | Forum | Replies | Last Post |
Low towing thought | Martin Gregorie | Soaring | 45 | March 13th 07 03:00 AM |
And you thought AMARC was bad.... | Ron | Aviation Photos | 18 | February 2nd 07 05:27 AM |
Just when I thought I'd heard it all:-) | Dudley Henriques | Piloting | 14 | November 23rd 05 08:18 PM |
A thought on BRS | Martin Gregorie | Soaring | 47 | April 29th 04 06:34 AM |
I thought some of these are classics | goneill | Soaring | 0 | April 8th 04 10:51 AM |