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![]() Mark Smith wrote: wrote: Mark Smith wrote: ... Hand proping is also done but as a last resort when the battery is dead. They do start easily when hand propped, but it takes a healthy pull on a blade, then staying out of the way. Some pushers with tails make getting away from the prop a physical excercise too. Thanks, and thnaks to the rest who responded as well. Supposedly with the adoption of the Light Sport Aircraft regs the FAA will soon begin stricter enforcement of the FAR 103 weight limits. where are they going to get the hundreds of new inspectors to do this effort, 'Fat' ultralights will have to get an airworthiness certificate as Experimental Light Sport Aircraft, or be converted to lawn ornaments. actually, homebuilt is still available for us, no lawn ornaments. that statement was made by an FnAA employee who got canned from the sprot pile it program, she is no longer around, I heard it from an EAA guy who recently gave us a very informative talk on the new LSA regs. He said that 'lawn ornament' was becoming popular jargon at the FAA. Don't non-FAR 103 compliant homebuilts require an airworthiness certificate? (That is what I wrote.) Won't homebuilts now be Experimental Light Sport Aircraft?, Is that the part I got wrong? What if the 'homebuilt' was a factory built 'Fat' ultralight? I heard it from an EAA guy who recently gave us a very informative talk on the new LSA regs. So I was thinking about how to get as large an engine as possible, like maybe a Zenoah G-50 on something like a Sadler Vampire while keeping it under 254 lbs. A 'sneaky' way to get a few more lbs might be to install the lightest BRS possible and then take the maximum weight allowance for a BRS. ... getting the smallest one may be false safety as it may be too small for the gross, depending on the pile it weight E.g. lightest possible should be read lightest that is adequate for gross weight. Was your spell checker that substituted 'pile it' for a typoed 'pilot'? Actually a propos considering the context.... -- FF |
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