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#1
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![]() "planeman" wrote in message oups.com... I see Mini-500 helicopters selling on eBay, but much less these days. Is there someone in the marketplace that can sell me parts if I was compelled to buy the incomplete one selling now? Despite what you may read below. This is a dnagerous machine. So unless you have 1000+ hours or rotorcraft time and know enough to know why youd want to put yourself in peril, take you money and invest it in training in a non-experimental helicopter. Bart |
#2
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Its incredible how much false information you can get on the newsgroups.
Persons who have never owned and flown a Mini-500 have nothing to offer but opinion from a extreme distance. It means nothing at all to those that really need to know. It is also pointless to get an opinion from a person with an axe to grind or that feels he has been swindled by someone with more brains than he has or at least the ability to use what he has more efficiently.. Persons who allow themselves to be indoctrinated by ignoramuses often become what they learn from. It is very evident in these forums. My Mini-500 was so easy to operate a caveman (with 20 hours of training) could do it. The only way to operate a helicopter safely is with in the design parameters. Then even that is no guarantee but it improves your safety factor.Very skilled and qualified pilots have operated outside these parameters and have been injured or killed. Sometimes pilots are killed by misjudgment or taking an ever so slight chance that they will be okay. Picking a bad emergency landing site killed two Sacramento sheriff's officers this month. Had it been a Mini-500 it would surely have been to blame because the unknowledgeable person would have been quick to blame it. I guess it boils down to who has more realistic advise for you, the manufacturer or the newsgroup detractor. A profound analysis in itself I would think. Think about it, read about it and form a conclusion based on reason. Or not, its a matter of free agency. "Clear the area before departure" "Look both ways before crossing the street" yada yada, or hell just knock on wood! "B4RT" wrote in message ... snipped Despite what you may read below. This is a dnagerous machine. So unless you have 1000+ hours or rotorcraft time and know enough to know why youd want to put yourself in peril, take you money and invest it in training in a non-experimental helicopter. Bart |
#3
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Jim wrote:
Its incredible how much false information you can get on the newsgroups. Well Jim I congratulate you heartily. You are one of the very, very, very few people who have ever come into this newsgroup who has anything good to say about the Mini 500. My Mini-500 was so easy to operate a caveman (with 20 hours of training) could do it. So I would presume that since this is such a joy to own and operate that you must still have yours. Perhaps you wouldn't mind telling the group approximately how many hours you have flying your Mini 500. Now I know there are a few people out there that have put some hours on their machines. And some of those are people who have done some extensive modifications to make them safer to fly. Unfortunately whether it was poor design, poor building, poor parts, poor piloting, poor weather, or just poor judgement, it appears that many of the Mini 500s seem to have suffered from various types of accidents, some of which resulted in the deaths of the pilot. Now Jim I am not being mean nor am I trying to be snotty. The fact is that if you have had good success with your machine, still have it in flying condition, and are generally happy with it's performance, then I do heartily congratulate you on your ability to enjoy as a hobby, what many in this newsgroup would like to do themselves. That being said I invite you to come back to this group and describe in some detail your experiences with the machine. Not only from a builders perspective, but that as a pilot owner operator and as the owner mechanic. I'm sure many in this group would be interested in reading your comments. I know I would. |
#4
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Dear Jim,
I tried to email this to you privately, but it returned. So, I'll post it here as a privet email. Those who read it are reading something not meant for anyone but Jim. Dear Jim, Thank you for your post, I'm happy to read what you said, but it will only cause you problems. These people live by "do not confuse the issues with the facts, we already made up our minds". They are mostly crippled with blinders, and unable to comprehend the facts. I only post here in rebuttal against what these few robot minded people parrot, and then only for those with open minds and hearts to have an opportunity to at least read the other side. Then, they can make up their own minds. It is a burden I bare alone, and no need for you to suffer by trying to say something contrary to what they want all others to believe. If all happy Mini-500 owners were as brave and forthright as you, and would stand and fight back, then it would be a victory, but that will never happen. Thank you for the bit of kindness, but you do not deserve their wrath. Most sincerely, Dennis Fetter Jim wrote: Its incredible how much false information you can get on the newsgroups. Persons who have never owned and flown a Mini-500 have nothing to offer but opinion from a extreme distance. It means nothing at all to those that really need to know. It is also pointless to get an opinion from a person with an axe to grind or that feels he has been swindled by someone with more brains than he has or at least the ability to use what he has more efficiently.. Persons who allow themselves to be indoctrinated by ignoramuses often become what they learn from. It is very evident in these forums. My Mini-500 was so easy to operate a caveman (with 20 hours of training) could do it. The only way to operate a helicopter safely is with in the design parameters. Then even that is no guarantee but it improves your safety factor.Very skilled and qualified pilots have operated outside these parameters and have been injured or killed. Sometimes pilots are killed by misjudgment or taking an ever so slight chance that they will be okay. Picking a bad emergency landing site killed two Sacramento sheriff's officers this month. Had it been a Mini-500 it would surely have been to blame because the unknowledgeable person would have been quick to blame it. I guess it boils down to who has more realistic advise for you, the manufacturer or the newsgroup detractor. A profound analysis in itself I would think. Think about it, read about it and form a conclusion based on reason. Or not, its a matter of free agency. "Clear the area before departure" "Look both ways before crossing the street" yada yada, or hell just knock on wood! "B4RT" wrote in message ... snipped Despite what you may read below. This is a dnagerous machine. So unless you have 1000+ hours or rotorcraft time and know enough to know why youd want to put yourself in peril, take you money and invest it in training in a non-experimental helicopter. Bart |
#5
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Dennis Fetters wrote:
Dear Jim, I tried to email this to you privately, but it returned. So, I'll post it here as a privet email. Those who read it are reading something not meant for anyone but Jim. Riiiight. Important message, for Jim... only for Jim... Dear Jim, Thank you for your post, I'm happy to read what you said, but it will only cause you problems. These people live by "do not confuse the issues with the facts, we already made up our minds". They are mostly crippled with blinders, and unable to comprehend the facts. I only post here in rebuttal against what these few robot minded people parrot, and then only for those with open minds and hearts to have an opportunity to at least read the other side. Then, they can make up their own minds. It is a burden I bare alone, and no need for you to suffer by trying to I'm getting all weepy. say something contrary to what they want all others to believe. If all happy Mini-500 owners were as brave and forthright as you, and would stand and fight back, then it would be a victory, but that will never happen. Thank you for the bit of kindness, but you do not deserve their wrath. I need a tissue sniff Most sincerely, Dennis Fetter You spelled your name wrong. |
#6
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![]() Scratch, Kevin and cloudster, You have absolutely no respect for anyone, and now you prove that you have no respect for yourselves. As for you making fun of someone's typo's and spellchecker oversights, it only proves my point. I have to type 10 times the amount as any of you to post my answers. And this is only a small part of my day. It's only the law of averages that I will overlook something. Setting my technical accomplishes aside, the big difference between you and me is respect for others. I would not discredit myself by making fun of someone's grammatical errors, as you would to yourselves. I'm glad I had to post this private email to Jim, because it shows people the true nature of my detractors. When you make fun of someone's sincere expressions of gratitude as you did, it shows people the dark side of your hearts, and shows them the evil behind what you do, and then they know that you have the ability to say anything, no matter if it's true or not. Because we all know what hate can make someone do, or say. During this same time, you have proven to all of us that you don't know what you're talking about, and that you are just being disrespectful for the sick fun of it. You have had nothing to do with a Mini-500, nor have you ever done business with me. You have nothing to complain about, and no bone to pick with me. You do it because the faceless newsgroups allow you to make unjust fun of others. You are worse than the bully on the block. At least he has the gonads to face the ones he attacks. The one person that appears on the newsgroup in defense of his Mini-500 is attacked and ridiculed. No wonder they stay away, who can blame them. But on the other hand, I must thank you. When people like you make untrue comments about the Mini-500 and myself, it gives me the opportunity to not only post the truth, but to expose the nature of the people making the untrue comments, which only adds to my credibility and others education on the subject. In this way, you help me by allowing the conversations to continue, and providing the forum to post my side in direct response to your inaccurate allegations and parroting of false roomers. You are unwittingly helping me, and I couldn't do it without you. Keep up the good work, boys. Dennis Fetters Scratch wrote: Dennis Fetters wrote: Dear Jim, I tried to email this to you privately, but it returned. So, I'll post it here as a privet email. Those who read it are reading something not meant for anyone but Jim. Riiiight. Important message, for Jim... only for Jim... Dear Jim, Thank you for your post, I'm happy to read what you said, but it will only cause you problems. These people live by "do not confuse the issues with the facts, we already made up our minds". They are mostly crippled with blinders, and unable to comprehend the facts. I only post here in rebuttal against what these few robot minded people parrot, and then only for those with open minds and hearts to have an opportunity to at least read the other side. Then, they can make up their own minds. It is a burden I bare alone, and no need for you to suffer by trying to I'm getting all weepy. say something contrary to what they want all others to believe. If all happy Mini-500 owners were as brave and forthright as you, and would stand and fight back, then it would be a victory, but that will never happen. Thank you for the bit of kindness, but you do not deserve their wrath. I need a tissue sniff Most sincerely, Dennis Fetter You spelled your name wrong. |
#7
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B4RT wrote;
So unless you have 1000+ hours or [of] rotorcraft time.. For the homebuilder; is that 1000 hours of flying experience, or 1000 hours of maintenance experience, or perhaps 1000 hours of experience in manufacturing and assembling rotorcraft? It is said that the Sikorsky Sea King requires 7-12 hours of maintenance for every hour of flying. http://www.canoe.ca/mb2/messages/cnewsf/994-2.html Maybe the maintained experience is the most important.for safe flight???? Just a question. |
#8
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Dave Jackson wrote:
B4RT wrote; So unless you have 1000+ hours or [of] rotorcraft time.. For the homebuilder; is that 1000 hours of flying experience, or 1000 hours of maintenance experience, or perhaps 1000 hours of experience in manufacturing and assembling rotorcraft? Dave, from my experience, that sounds about right. If Kit aircraft had the same laws backing them as certified aircraft, then people would by law have to build and maintain their aircraft to factory standards, and in most cases that would vastly reduce the accident rate. Sincerely, Dennis Fetters |
#9
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Dennis Fetters wrote:
Dave Jackson wrote: B4RT wrote; So unless you have 1000+ hours or [of] rotorcraft time.. For the homebuilder; is that 1000 hours of flying experience, or 1000 hours of maintenance experience, or perhaps 1000 hours of experience in manufacturing and assembling rotorcraft? Dave, from my experience, that sounds about right. If Kit aircraft had the same laws backing them as certified aircraft, then people would by law have to build and maintain their aircraft to factory standards, and in most cases that would vastly reduce the accident rate. Sincerely, Dennis Fetters And, of course, complexity explains all of the deaths in your generation of Air Command gyroplanes. They were banned in Britain, and your successors, thankfully, have worked very hard to overcome the deadly design flaws in your machines. You are so full of **** I can't believe it. Go peddle your wares somewhere else. |
#10
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Peter Wendell wrote:
Dennis Fetters wrote: Dave Jackson wrote: For the homebuilder; is that 1000 hours of flying experience, or 1000 hours of maintenance experience, or perhaps 1000 hours of experience in manufacturing and assembling rotorcraft? Dave, from my experience, that sounds about right. If Kit aircraft had the same laws backing them as certified aircraft, then people would by law have to build and maintain their aircraft to factory standards, and in most cases that would vastly reduce the accident rate. Sincerely, Dennis Fetters And, of course, complexity explains all of the deaths in your generation of Air Command gyroplanes. They were banned in Britain, and your successors, thankfully, have worked very hard to overcome the deadly design flaws in your machines. I have posted about this before, in case you didn't read. I went to Britain myself and set a person up as our Air Command dealer. Some mouths after I had left, that dealer took it upon himself, without my knowledge, to turn his Commander customers loose after only 5 hours of training, even after I told them before they need a minimum of 20 hours, and then strict supervision afterwards. The result was some of his low time customers tried to fly on very windy days, and that wind caused circumstances that exceeded their ability to fly the gyroplane with the experience they possessed, causing them to loose control and crash. Afterwards, the dealer was contacted by the CAA and asked why he would release his customers only after 5 hours of training. The CAA also sent me a letter asking what we recommended the training time should be. The dealer asked me to tell the CAA 5 hours, but I refused, and told them what we told the dealer originally. The dealer felt betrayed, and to avoid legal circumstances left the country. The CAA will not allow a kit aircraft to fly without dealer representation, and had no choice but to ground the fleet. Before all this, I was made an offer to sell the Commander business. At that same time I was already working on the Mini-500, and decided to sell the Commander line. If I would not have sold the Commander line, then I would have took the time to reestablish a new dealer in Britain and help with the crash investigation, and the fleet would not have been grounded. But, since I sold the company, it was up to the new owners to do that, and they never did. So, the meaning of your statement above is not actually in the light you tried to present it. As a matter of fact, you can go to any gyroplane air show and see original Air Command gyroplanes that are 25 years old, still flying with the newest designs, and keeping up or staying ahead. There is no better testament of the design than that. You are so full of **** I can't believe it. Go peddle your wares somewhere else. Maybe so. But I'm not here belittling myself by cursing and name calling, unless the shoe fits. I'm not here making statements out of context to portray a false meaning, like you are. So, be careful Peter, even if you're making the standards you are still being judged. Where will it put you on your totem poll? Dennis Fetters |
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