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#1
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Of the various 3-4 place canards derived from Burt Rutan's original,
(cosy, velocity, ...) are there any with wings easily folded/detached for trailering? I'd like to consider acquiring one, but hangarage is very unavailable round here, so the bird would have to live on a trailer when not flying. TIA, |
#2
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On Sun, 25 Jan 2009 17:37:40 +0000, jan olieslagers
wrote: Of the various 3-4 place canards derived from Burt Rutan's original, (cosy, velocity, ...) are there any with wings easily folded/detached for trailering? I'd like to consider acquiring one, but hangarage is very unavailable round here, so the bird would have to live on a trailer when not flying. TIA, there was an Eagle X that was setup to be trailerable. it is a 3 wing thing with similar problems to canards. their method was to split the fuselage so that the canard and mains remained untouched and the tailcone pulled off. it was mounted sideways on the trailer. ....there is more than one way.... Stealth Pilot |
#3
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None of the Rutan type derivatives are easily trailerable. They
require removing the main wings and wiring (3 bolts each wing) and the resultant strake/canard width is near 12 feet wide. It is possible to make a trailer jig that would set it up at a slant - see http://www.abri.net/sq2000/travel12.jpg for a four place canard. You could leave it tied down at the airport when anticipating frequent flights and then towed home when not. But it is not very fast loading it. On Jan 25, 11:37 am, jan olieslagers wrote: Of the various 3-4 place canards derived from Burt Rutan's original, (cosy, velocity, ...) are there any with wings easily folded/detached for trailering? I'd like to consider acquiring one, but hangarage is very unavailable round here, so the bird would have to live on a trailer when not flying. TIA, |
#4
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Shucks... If you don't mind a two seater and wait a little bit you can
drive a canard home to your garage: http://www.terrafugia.com/ On Jan 25, 11:37 am, jan olieslagers wrote: Of the various 3-4 place canards derived from Burt Rutan's original, (cosy, velocity, ...) are there any with wings easily folded/detached for trailering? I'd like to consider acquiring one, but hangarage is very unavailable round here, so the bird would have to live on a trailer when not flying. TIA, |
#5
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![]() "abripl" wrote in message ... Shucks... If you don't mind a two seater and wait a little bit you can drive a canard home to your garage: http://www.terrafugia.com/ Sure! Believe that one and I have some waterfront property in the middle of Florida to sell you. Vaughn |
#6
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On Jan 26, 6:53 pm, "vaughn"
wrote: "abripl" wrote in message ... Shucks... If you don't mind a two seater and wait a little bit you can drive a canard home to your garage: http://www.terrafugia.com/ Sure! Believe that one and I have some waterfront property in the middle of Florida to sell you. Vaughn There are always insulting armchair critics that don't accomplish much themselves. Successful flying cars have been around since 1957 http://www.aviation-history.com/garb...obile-1_f.html Being mechanically successful may be different from commercially successful. Terrafugia unit is not much more than a refinement of previous efforts. I hope they succeed and I wish them the best of luck. |
#7
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![]() "abripl" wrote in message ... On Jan 26, 6:53 pm, "vaughn" wrote: "abripl" wrote in message ... Shucks... If you don't mind a two seater and wait a little bit you can drive a canard home to your garage: http://www.terrafugia.com/ Sure! Believe that one and I have some waterfront property in the middle of Florida to sell you. Vaughn There are always insulting armchair critics that don't accomplish much themselves. You have no idea what I have accomplished, so you seem to be the one doing the insulting. Successful flying cars have been around since 1957 You are dead wrong. There have been various flying cars produced, even certified over the years. None have achieved success by any normal measure. Even the world's governments with their amazing military budgets have never produced any such vehicle/plane in any quantity. Because of regulations on both the aircraft and the automobile side that have been proglimated over the decades since 1957, commercial success would be even less likely today. I hope they succeed and I wish them the best of luck. It may be a surprise to you, but I happen to agree with you on this point, but history tells me not to be optimistic.. Vaughn |
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