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#21
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Vaughn Simon wrote:
"Peter Dohm" wrote in message . .. I have exactly the same concern about those tilt forward canopies; and don't know how, or if, it is adiquately adressed. It just seems like a high price to make egress easier on the ramp. In my experience, a conopy does nothing to make egress easier on the ramp. In fact, I recently stopped renting a factory made Zenith partially because it is difficult for a solo pilot to close and properly latch the ill-fitting canopy. I will take a real door any day. The canopy on a Grumman does what a canopy is supposed to do and slides back. What a canopy really does is simplify airframe design, particularly for a mid-wing design; but it does so at the expense of adding a whole new set of problems. The only problems with Grumman canopies is the $3 nylon bushing that wears out and you need to clean and lube the tracks now and then. -- Jim Pennino Remove .spam.sux to reply. |
#22
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Dallas wrote:
When I pushed the door open into the 100 knot slipstream, it came down with equal force. Lesson learned: don't open the window, push on the interior frame with your palm flat and vertical and your thumb straight out to the right. Review required: Parasite drag. :P TheSmokingGnu |
#23
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On Sun, 17 Aug 2008 09:00:02 +0200 (CEST), Nomen Nescio wrote:
Life's journey is not to arrive at the grave safely in a pristine, well-preserved body,but rather to skid in sideways, totally used up and worn out, shouting "Holy ****...what a ride!!" ....and with the most toys. :- ) -- Dallas |
#24
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On Sun, 17 Aug 2008 01:57:21 -0400, Morgans wrote:
Anyway, did you manage to get the door shut when you cut your finger? I was a student flying dual with my CFI (ManhattanMan was in the back seat waiting for his turn to fly). The CFI said he *thought* the door was open and he gave me the instructions on what to do. When I opened the window it stayed up, so I used my right hand to pop the latch while holding the door by the window frame with my left. When I pushed the door open into the 100 knot slipstream, it came down with equal force. Looking back it was predictable, but as a student I was doing everything the CFI told me to do. The funny part was that I was sure the door wasn't open. suppose you turned around and went for medical attention. Hell no, no pussies on that airplane! We tied it off until my finger tip was turning blue, then went on to fly for 2 more hours. :- ) -- Dallas |
#25
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![]() wrote in message ... Vaughn Simon wrote: The canopy on a Grumman does what a canopy is supposed to do and slides back. (some snipped) -- Jim Pennino I agree completely! Personally, as a builder, I would be inclined to add a couple of hand grips in the glareshield and a ridge across the floor about a foot ahead of the seat, to make it easier to heave myself up and out; but that does not detract in any way from the basic concept that the canopy of a small GA aircraft should slide back as its means of opening. Peter |
#26
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Peter Dohm wrote:
wrote in message ... Vaughn Simon wrote: The canopy on a Grumman does what a canopy is supposed to do and slides back. (some snipped) -- Jim Pennino I agree completely! Personally, as a builder, I would be inclined to add a couple of hand grips in the glareshield and a ridge across the floor about a foot ahead of the seat, to make it easier to heave myself up and out; but that does not detract in any way from the basic concept that the canopy of a small GA aircraft should slide back as its means of opening. On the Grummans, there is a metal bow for the seal and latching mechanism that works fine for a hand hold. The seat cushions flip up with your toes so you step in onto the seat pan, then the floor and sit down. It is a lot easier than it sounds. See: http://mail.specsol.com/~jimp/tiger.jpg -- Jim Pennino Remove .spam.sux to reply. |
#27
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![]() "Rocky Stevens" wrote in message ... Not that anecdotal evidence means anything, but my flying lessons have been stopped for over a week due to some latch problem with the Evektor Sportstar's canopy. VERY frustrating.... Yes, a broken canopy can cost thousands to repair and ground a plane for months. I have a few years of glider instructing in my background. Since most gliders have hinged canopies, one of the first lectures any of our student received is on the care and feeding of canopies: -They are never slammed. -You never walk away from an open canopy (can get blown closed and cracked). -You never sit in a cockpit with the canopy closed but not latched (might forget & take off with unlatched canopy). -Check latch & push up on canopy as part of every pre-takeoff check. -Never wear a baseball hat with a button on top (good advice in any aircraft, but especially true with a canopy). -If things suddenly get noisy and windy, forget the canopy and fly the aircraft. -- Vaughn Nothing personal, but if you are posting through Google Groups I may not receive your message. Google refuses to control the flood of spam messages originating in their system, so on any given day I may or may not have Google blocked. Try a real NNTP server & news reader program and you will never go back. All you need is access to an NNTP server (AKA "news server") and a news reader program. You probably already have a news reader program in your computer (Hint: Outlook Express). Assuming that your Usenet needs are modest, use http://news.aioe.org/ for free and/or http://www.teranews.com/ for a one-time $3.95 setup fee. Will poofread for food. |
#28
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wrote in message
... Peter Dohm wrote: wrote in message ... Vaughn Simon wrote: The canopy on a Grumman does what a canopy is supposed to do and slides back. (some snipped) -- Jim Pennino I agree completely! Personally, as a builder, I would be inclined to add a couple of hand grips in the glareshield and a ridge across the floor about a foot ahead of the seat, to make it easier to heave myself up and out; but that does not detract in any way from the basic concept that the canopy of a small GA aircraft should slide back as its means of opening. On the Grummans, there is a metal bow for the seal and latching mechanism that works fine for a hand hold. The seat cushions flip up with your toes so you step in onto the seat pan, then the floor and sit down. It is a lot easier than it sounds. See: http://mail.specsol.com/~jimp/tiger.jpg -- Jim Pennino That sounds like a good concept. BTW, that paint scheme suits the tiger very well. Peter |
#29
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#30
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John Godwin wrote:
wrote in : The canopy on a Grumman does what a canopy is supposed to do and slides back. The folks at Zlin would disagree :-) Only because they had a bunch of Pole illegal immigrants working in the factory who were putting the canopies on backwards and by the time anyone noticed, it was too late... -- Jim Pennino Remove .spam.sux to reply. |
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