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#1
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regarding the new Sport Pilot and Sport Plane rule? Here's why I ask:
The news from Airventure is that the rule has left the FAA and is on the way to DOT. Quoting from the Airventure website: "Major Step Forward for Sport Pilot Rule Announced at EAA AirVenture July 31, 2003 - The new sport pilot and light-sport aircraft (SP/LSA) categories passed a major milestone today when FAA Administrator Marion Blakey announced at the Experimental Aircraft Association's (EAA) annual EAA AirVenture fly-in that the FAA had completed work on the final rule. The rulemaking package has now been forwarded to the Department of Transportation (DOT) for review." Also in the news from Airventure, two well-known manufacturers have announced they will enter into the Sport Plane market, namely, Mooney and Maule. Mooney will be importing the TOXO from Spain and assembling it here. Maule showed a new airplane targeted for the Light Sport Aircraft market. Here's the deal though. Neither one of these airplanes meets the rule as we know it. The TOXO has too high a landing speed and too high of a cruise speed. The Maule, weighs 1000 pounds empty which means the useful load will only be 232 pounds. Not very useful. I'm just wondering if these manufacturers know something we don't about the final rule or on the other hand, are they building airplanes to a rule that they don't understand? Rick Pellicciotti http://www.belleairetours.com |
#2
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I'm just wondering if these manufacturers know something we don't about the
final rule or on the other hand, are they building airplanes to a rule that they don't understand? Maybe after watching all the "fat" ultralights fly around vertually unmolested they think they can bend the new rules as well? I'd almost bet that Rotax will introduce a derated 912, somewhere around 75-80 Hp, and call it something like a 912LS just for the new LSA's. And one wonders how long before the owners discover that it's probably pretty easy and inexpensive to convert them back to "normal" 912's. "course that wouldn't be legal, at least not any more than 350lb 103's......... |
#3
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The 912 is 80 hp. The 912S is 100 hp.
-- Kevin McCue KRYN '47 Luscombe 8E Rans S-17 (for sale) -----= Posted via Newsfeeds.Com, Uncensored Usenet News =----- http://www.newsfeeds.com - The #1 Newsgroup Service in the World! -----== Over 80,000 Newsgroups - 16 Different Servers! =----- |
#4
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![]() "BD5ER" wrote in message ... I'm just wondering if these manufacturers know something we don't about the final rule or on the other hand, are they building airplanes to a rule that they don't understand? Maybe after watching all the "fat" ultralights fly around vertually unmolested they think they can bend the new rules as well? I'd almost bet that Rotax will introduce a derated 912, somewhere around 75-80 Hp, and call it something like a 912LS just for the new LSA's. And one wonders how long before the owners discover that it's probably pretty easy and inexpensive to convert them back to "normal" 912's. "course that wouldn't be legal, at least not any more than 350lb 103's......... It doesn't matter what the HP is rated at. In the last version we saw, the new rule only cared how fast it would go, level at WOT. -- ---Jim in NC--- |
#5
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"Morgans" post/the/group.here.net wrote in message
... It doesn't matter what the HP is rated at. In the last version we saw, the new rule only cared how fast it would go, level at WOT. How would the rule apply to Zeppelins? Rich "Gross weight or mass?" S. |
#6
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It doesn't matter what the HP is rated at. In the last version we saw, the
new rule only cared how fast it would go, level at WOT. Last one I saw said continuos rated power not maximum? Maximum power is the determining factor for a Part 103 UL. From my copy of the NPRM: ============ A light-sport aircraft would have a maximum speed in level flight with maximum continuous power (VH) of 115 knots. This limits the commanded kinetic energy of an aircraft ============ Has this been revised? I also mis quoted the Rotax Hp, but the idea is the same. |
#7
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![]() "BD5ER" wrote in message ... It doesn't matter what the HP is rated at. In the last version we saw, the new rule only cared how fast it would go, level at WOT. Last one I saw said continuos rated power not maximum? Maximum power is the determining factor for a Part 103 UL. From my copy of the NPRM: ============ A light-sport aircraft would have a maximum speed in level flight with maximum continuous power (VH) of 115 knots. This limits the commanded kinetic energy of an aircraft ============ Has this been revised? I also mis quoted the Rotax Hp, but the idea is the same. I saw something that said you could not place something likie a RPM restriction, or anything else that could be easily overcome by a pilot. Therefore, it sounds to me like WOT = Max Cont Power. -- ---Jim in NC--- |
#8
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I saw something that said you could not place something likie a RPM
restriction, or anything else that could be easily overcome by a pilot. Therefore, it sounds to me like WOT = Max Cont Power. I would have expected the FAA to follow the precedent established with 103 and do it this way, but I hope they don't. A little extra power available for takeoff and other "emergencies" would be nice. We'll just all have to wait until the rule is final to see what it says, and then a few months to see how the words are going to be interoperated in various parts of the country....... |
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