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My question is, if its his system, and hes an ultralite pilot. Why not
test it himself on his ultralite? Hmmm Jester "feeling facetious" Jesse |
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I don't currently own an ultralight. Hard times as a result of 911 placed my
ultralight in the "for sale" column. I must admit, it was hard to sell. I love flying more than anything. But my next aircraft will be a wood amphibian. ( I"m currently working on it's design as well. Based on a PBY crossed with a Grumman Goose. Tandem configuration, twin engine. Very light.....as light as it can be and be safe.) Plus you never test an item if you designed it....you miss the flaws......because you didn't think of them....how would you find them? How do you test for flaws you didn't think of preventing in the first place? I've tested as far as I'm currently able. The testing process would be one axis at a time to ensure correct orientation/operation. The pilot would only have to worry about that axis not being correct. I will say, this would take a pilot who is certain of his flying skills....and has NO doubt. The ideal person (if knowing altitude and obsticles) should be able to fly his aircraft by feel. Also the ideal person will have built his plane himself, kit or otherwise. This is not a Chuck Yeager type situation. The pilot would just fly the plane normally and engage the system. If the system works correctly he notices nothing.(He may notice something....but it would be slight). If it behaves incorrectly then he notices an unusual pressure on the stick, pushing the wrong way( or moving at all). We are adding trim tabs to the flight surfaces.....This makes the system totally independant from the flight controls(stick, yoke, etc.). The flight controls always have positive authority. Hope that answers your question. James Long "Jester" wrote in message ups.com... My question is, if its his system, and hes an ultralite pilot. Why not test it himself on his ultralite? Hmmm Jester "feeling facetious" Jesse |
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