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#1
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Our club (NJ - USA) has folded and we still have an L-13 taking up space. Before I call the local scrap yard I thought I'd ask if anyone might be interested in buying it at scrap value with the dreams of getting airworthy again. We also have an open trailer for it that will be available separately if the bird goes to the junk yard. mikefaddenathotmail.com.
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#2
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On May 3, 7:16*am, wrote:
Our club (NJ - USA) has folded and we still have an L-13 taking up space. Before I call the local scrap yard I thought I'd ask if anyone might be interested in buying it at scrap value with the dreams of getting airworthy again. We also have an open trailer for it that will be available separately if the bird goes to the junk yard. mikefaddenathotmail.com. Convert the cockpit to a flight simulator? |
#3
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Giant scale RC.
"No sir, that's a *model* you saw flying last weekend. Yes, indeed we do tow it with an L-19 and we used to use it as a sailplane, but it's just an RC model now. Oh, the radio gear and servos go home with one of the club members. Yes, we've kept the cockpit original for realism and old time's sake. No, of course I can't show you how the servos hook up, that's proprietary to the guy that built them. No, absolutely we won't show you, this isn't a a civil aircraft any longer, it's just a model. No, my lawyer says we don't have to... you don't have jurisdiction over models." :-) T8 |
#4
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On Thursday, May 3, 2012 9:16:51 AM UTC-4, wrote:
Our club (NJ - USA) has folded and we still have an L-13 taking up space. Before I call the local scrap yard I thought I'd ask if anyone might be interested in buying it at scrap value My condolences. This sadly reminds me of euthanizing my devoted old dog. |
#5
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Open up the wing, wrap the spar with Kevlar and carbon fiber/epoxy and
carbon rod top and bottom. Lots of info on this at many web sites. Reassemble the wing. Do a 10G sandbag test. Document everything and ask for an experimental certificate from your local FAA. Or call it an L-13plus and go fly. |
#6
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On May 3, 10:19*am, Evan Ludeman wrote:
Giant scale RC. "No sir, that's a *model* you saw flying last weekend. *Yes, indeed we do tow it with an L-19 and we used to use it as a sailplane, but it's just an RC model now. *Oh, the radio gear and servos go home with one of the club members. *Yes, we've kept the *cockpit original for realism and old time's sake. *No, of course I can't show you how the servos hook up, that's proprietary to the guy that built them. *No, absolutely we won't show you, this isn't a a civil aircraft any longer, it's just a model. *No, my lawyer says we don't have to... you don't have jurisdiction over models." :-) T8 Hmmmmm! Does the FAA have jurisdiction over UAVs or is it DOD? |
#7
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On May 3, 9:33*am, soartech wrote:
Open up the wing, wrap the spar with Kevlar and carbon fiber/epoxy and carbon rod top and bottom. I once designed a wing that used a carbon rod wing spar and aluminum skins. In order to make the spar stiff enough so that the wing skins did not yield and buckle within the limit load envelope, the spar needed four times the amount of carbon dictated by the strength requirements. Basically, I would have had to make the carbon spar as stiff as the aluminum spar it was intended to replace. That carbon spar would still have been lighter than its aluminum equivalent, but would have been much pricier. In the end, I went with composite skins and only twice the amount of carbon rod dictated by strength, and it worked out great. Regardless, designing a retrofit that uses a carbon fiber spar but retains the aluminum parts and detail design of the rest of the structure would be a substantial undertaking with a lot of risk and potential for heartache. I think it would be better to invest the time and effort into a new training sailplane design more effectively optimized for the current realities of soaring flight training. Thanks, Bob K. |
#8
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![]() Apart from being bad advice on many fronts with this particular wing design.... You can't go experimental to circumvent an AD. aerodyne |
#9
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What ever became of our SSA and the "government liaison and support we pay
so dearly for with the high dues and fees? Isn't this what we all belong for? where is their support and chain rattling with the FAA to get this issue resolved? tim wrote in message news:8062526.4081.1336051011893.JavaMail.geo-discussion-forums@vbkv21... Our club (NJ - USA) has folded and we still have an L-13 taking up space. Before I call the local scrap yard I thought I'd ask if anyone might be interested in buying it at scrap value with the dreams of getting airworthy again. We also have an open trailer for it that will be available separately if the bird goes to the junk yard. mikefaddenathotmail.com. |
#10
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I was told: You are the SSA, it is up to you to do something, we are
just volunteers. Better yet... where is the protests and letters to the FAA docket during the comments period last year? 200 L-13's onthe registry, ONE THIRD of the trainer fleet, yet only 27 comments from like 9 people? 4 comments from yours truly; aerodyne |
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