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first member of the Hanoi Chapter of EAA



 
 
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  #1  
Old February 17th 04, 04:51 AM
Dave
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Default first member of the Hanoi Chapter of EAA

from Fox News - too bad Le Van Danh chose a Mini 500 for his first project



HANOI, Vietnam (AP) - With directions from the Internet and an old Russian
truck motor, a Vietnamese farmer fulfilled his dream of making his own
helicopter. The job took two friends, seven years and $30,000.

Now, military officials say he can't fly it, because he didn't get approval
to build it, and they confiscated the makeshift copter.

"It's my hobby," farmer Le Van Danh complained by telephone Monday from his
hometown of Tay Ninh, in Vietnam's southwest. "I will do whatever I can,
including going to the prime minister, to get the permission."

True, he admits, the helicopter is still a work in progress: It only rises
about 18 inches off the ground. "We are in the process of a fifth test of
moving forward and backward, left and right," Danh said.

Getting approval to keep working on the chopper won't be easy. No Vietnamese
individual has ever been granted a government license to build an aircraft,
said Le Cong Tinh, director of the Air Transport Safety division of the
country's Civil Aviation Administration.

The farmer said he won't give up, vowing to sell his house or 25 acres of
land if that's what it takes to get the license. "If I cannot do it, my
children or my grandchildren will do it," he said.


  #2  
Old February 19th 04, 02:23 AM
Kevin 'Hognose' O'Brien
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Default

In article ,
"Dave" wrote:

from Fox News - too bad Le Van Danh chose a Mini 500 for his first project



Ouch... Zing! Still, Muslim-terrorist-wannabee Dennis Fetters was doing
some deal in Asia, wasn't he?

The job took two friends, seven years and $30,000.


Soesn't say how many wives.


"It's my hobby," farmer Le Van Danh complained by telephone Monday from his
hometown of Tay Ninh, in Vietnam's southwest.


He'd probably be in the Saigon chapter (no one calls it Ho Chi Minh city
but the sort of asshat bureaucrats Mr Danh is dealing with). Tay Ninh
was a provincial capital in the old Republic.


Getting approval to keep working on the chopper won't be easy. No Vietnamese
individual has ever been granted a government license to build an aircraft,


Well, yeah, he might do something bad, like fly to a free country.

cheers

-=K=-

No clever tagline yet
  #3  
Old February 19th 04, 02:59 AM
Badwater Bill
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Default

On Tue, 17 Feb 2004 04:51:35 GMT, "Dave" wrote:

from Fox News - too bad Le Van Danh chose a Mini 500 for his first project



HANOI, Vietnam (AP) - With directions from the Internet and an old Russian
truck motor, a Vietnamese farmer fulfilled his dream of making his own
helicopter. The job took two friends, seven years and $30,000.

Now, military officials say he can't fly it, because he didn't get approval
to build it, and they confiscated the makeshift copter.

"It's my hobby," farmer Le Van Danh complained by telephone Monday from his
hometown of Tay Ninh, in Vietnam's southwest. "I will do whatever I can,
including going to the prime minister, to get the permission."

True, he admits, the helicopter is still a work in progress: It only rises
about 18 inches off the ground. "We are in the process of a fifth test of
moving forward and backward, left and right," Danh said.

Getting approval to keep working on the chopper won't be easy. No Vietnamese
individual has ever been granted a government license to build an aircraft,
said Le Cong Tinh, director of the Air Transport Safety division of the
country's Civil Aviation Administration.

The farmer said he won't give up, vowing to sell his house or 25 acres of
land if that's what it takes to get the license. "If I cannot do it, my
children or my grandchildren will do it," he said.



That's really too bad in reality. This guy probably thinks he bought
a viable commodity; something that might take him aloft to self
actualize his most spiritual dreams of flight. From the little we see
written here it appears that he's hovered it (maybe) at 18 inches for
a bit. Depending upon how long he did that, he's probably worn it out
already.

Mine wore out in about 20 hours.

Let's see...$30,000 for 20 hours is about what?.....$1500/hr. Worst
cost to benefit ratio I ever saw for a homebuilder. I'm glad that
Fred Stewart gave it to me. Sorry for Fred's loss of money on that
deal.

This is the problem with what fetters did (in my HUMBLE opinion).
These kits were sold to anyone. All you had to do was be able to sign
your name on the check. I doubt that most of the buyers really knew
anything much about homebuilding. Most of the first time homebuilders
I met when they elected me the president of the builder's association
who built the Mini-500 helicopter had no other experience. They
didn't know if a castle nut, a pal nut or a nylock nut was required on
a component.

So they just blindly followed the plans and assembly instructions.

I mean, how many knew what type of bearings should have been used on
the main rotor transmission or if they were wrong? How about the
bearing in the tailrotor transmission? How many might know that needs
to be a special thrust bearing? How many might know how to use a
Chadwick tracking and balancing instrument to fine tune the moment if
inertia of the main and tail rotor blades so they don't tear the
machine apart when they spool it up?

So, this guy in Viet Nam with his life savings and a dream for flight
gets to buy this piece of ****, death trap, build it and attempt to
waste himself. Then to top it all off, he has to deal with the
Vietnamese government to fly it. Poor rice farmer! Duped from the
get-go and no where to turn.

Well, I have something to tell him if he could hear me. You are lucky
Mr. Vietnam Man. There are many who did fly it and they died. At
least you get to hold your children in your arms for another day and
tuck them into bed at night. Many others like my buddies Gil
Armbruster and Allen Barklage have been in the grave for many years
now from their faith in the Mini-500 while others proclaim their
destiny was from a lack of experience, or pilot error.

Yeah, right.

Allen with 32,000 (Thirty two thousand) hours of chopper time, punches
in and buys the farm in his Mini-500. Yep, must have been lack of
experience eh?

Have a nice day.

BWB


  #4  
Old February 19th 04, 04:55 AM
El Roto
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My initial impression when I read the story: the guy was triple-screwed, but
he will stay alive as long as they kept him from flying the thing. He
doesn't know how lucky he is.


  #5  
Old February 19th 04, 05:07 AM
Ron Wanttaja
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On Wed, 18 Feb 2004 22:55:22 -0600, "El Roto"
wrote:

My initial impression when I read the story: the guy was triple-screwed, but
he will stay alive as long as they kept him from flying the thing. He
doesn't know how lucky he is.


My initial reaction was, "Why didn't McNamara think of this
40 years ago?" :-)

Ron Wanttaja

  #6  
Old February 19th 04, 05:21 AM
Richard Lamb
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Default

Ron Wanttaja wrote:

On Wed, 18 Feb 2004 22:55:22 -0600, "El Roto"
wrote:

My initial impression when I read the story: the guy was triple-screwed, but
he will stay alive as long as they kept him from flying the thing. He
doesn't know how lucky he is.


My initial reaction was, "Why didn't McNamara think of this
40 years ago?" :-)

Ron Wanttaja


too busy with Nicaragua?
  #7  
Old February 19th 04, 08:54 AM
pacplyer
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Posts: n/a
Default

But dang that thing looked neat. Too bad the power to weight was so
lousy. And the hardware quality control was so lacking. And the
design was so questionable (my opinions only.) If I was surfing the
net in my rice paddy, I'd order up one too on the internet just from
the color shots alone. Not sure I'd go with the Russian truck engine
though! But *hay*, who wants to live forever right? ;^D

Besides, after you send the check, Allah or Buddha will watch over
your ball bearings.

pac "true believer" plyer

(thank god for free speech at RAH, who knows, I might have bought one
of those things!)


(Badwater Bill) wrote in message .. .
On Tue, 17 Feb 2004 04:51:35 GMT, "Dave" wrote:

from Fox News - too bad Le Van Danh chose a Mini 500 for his first project



HANOI, Vietnam (AP) - With directions from the Internet and an old Russian
truck motor, a Vietnamese farmer fulfilled his dream of making his own
helicopter. The job took two friends, seven years and $30,000.

Now, military officials say he can't fly it, because he didn't get approval
to build it, and they confiscated the makeshift copter.

"It's my hobby," farmer Le Van Danh complained by telephone Monday from his
hometown of Tay Ninh, in Vietnam's southwest. "I will do whatever I can,
including going to the prime minister, to get the permission."

True, he admits, the helicopter is still a work in progress: It only rises
about 18 inches off the ground. "We are in the process of a fifth test of
moving forward and backward, left and right," Danh said.

Getting approval to keep working on the chopper won't be easy. No Vietnamese
individual has ever been granted a government license to build an aircraft,
said Le Cong Tinh, director of the Air Transport Safety division of the
country's Civil Aviation Administration.

The farmer said he won't give up, vowing to sell his house or 25 acres of
land if that's what it takes to get the license. "If I cannot do it, my
children or my grandchildren will do it," he said.



That's really too bad in reality. This guy probably thinks he bought
a viable commodity; something that might take him aloft to self
actualize his most spiritual dreams of flight. From the little we see
written here it appears that he's hovered it (maybe) at 18 inches for
a bit. Depending upon how long he did that, he's probably worn it out
already.

Mine wore out in about 20 hours.

Let's see...$30,000 for 20 hours is about what?.....$1500/hr. Worst
cost to benefit ratio I ever saw for a homebuilder. I'm glad that
Fred Stewart gave it to me. Sorry for Fred's loss of money on that
deal.

This is the problem with what fetters did (in my HUMBLE opinion).
These kits were sold to anyone. All you had to do was be able to sign
your name on the check. I doubt that most of the buyers really knew
anything much about homebuilding. Most of the first time homebuilders
I met when they elected me the president of the builder's association
who built the Mini-500 helicopter had no other experience. They
didn't know if a castle nut, a pal nut or a nylock nut was required on
a component.

So they just blindly followed the plans and assembly instructions.

I mean, how many knew what type of bearings should have been used on
the main rotor transmission or if they were wrong? How about the
bearing in the tailrotor transmission? How many might know that needs
to be a special thrust bearing? How many might know how to use a
Chadwick tracking and balancing instrument to fine tune the moment if
inertia of the main and tail rotor blades so they don't tear the
machine apart when they spool it up?

So, this guy in Viet Nam with his life savings and a dream for flight
gets to buy this piece of ****, death trap, build it and attempt to
waste himself. Then to top it all off, he has to deal with the
Vietnamese government to fly it. Poor rice farmer! Duped from the
get-go and no where to turn.

Well, I have something to tell him if he could hear me. You are lucky
Mr. Vietnam Man. There are many who did fly it and they died. At
least you get to hold your children in your arms for another day and
tuck them into bed at night. Many others like my buddies Gil
Armbruster and Allen Barklage have been in the grave for many years
now from their faith in the Mini-500 while others proclaim their
destiny was from a lack of experience, or pilot error.

Yeah, right.

Allen with 32,000 (Thirty two thousand) hours of chopper time, punches
in and buys the farm in his Mini-500. Yep, must have been lack of
experience eh?

Have a nice day.

BWB

  #8  
Old February 19th 04, 05:15 PM
Dude
external usenet poster
 
Posts: n/a
Default


"Dave" wrote in message
...
from Fox News - too bad Le Van Danh chose a Mini 500 for his first project



HANOI, Vietnam (AP) - With directions from the Internet and an old Russian
truck motor, a Vietnamese farmer fulfilled his dream of making his own
helicopter. The job took two friends, seven years and $30,000.

Now, military officials say he can't fly it, because he didn't get

approval
to build it, and they confiscated the makeshift copter.

"It's my hobby," farmer Le Van Danh complained by telephone Monday from

his
hometown of Tay Ninh, in Vietnam's southwest. "I will do whatever I can,
including going to the prime minister, to get the permission."

True, he admits, the helicopter is still a work in progress: It only rises
about 18 inches off the ground. "We are in the process of a fifth test of
moving forward and backward, left and right," Danh said.

Getting approval to keep working on the chopper won't be easy. No

Vietnamese
individual has ever been granted a government license to build an

aircraft,
said Le Cong Tinh, director of the Air Transport Safety division of the
country's Civil Aviation Administration.

The farmer said he won't give up, vowing to sell his house or 25 acres of
land if that's what it takes to get the license. "If I cannot do it, my
children or my grandchildren will do it," he said.


All this guy wanted was a little freedom. He is lucky they got there in
time to stop him from doing what they drove him to do in the first place.
The design didn't really matter, the results were likely to be fatal anyway.
IIRC, Russian truck engines were never really known for a high power to
weight ratio.






  #9  
Old February 19th 04, 05:18 PM
Badwater Bill
external usenet poster
 
Posts: n/a
Default

On 19 Feb 2004 00:54:40 -0800, (pacplyer) wrote:

But dang that thing looked neat. Too bad the power to weight was so
lousy. And the hardware quality control was so lacking. And the
design was so questionable (my opinions only.) If I was surfing the
net in my rice paddy, I'd order up one too on the internet just from
the color shots alone. Not sure I'd go with the Russian truck engine
though! But *hay*, who wants to live forever right? ;^D

Besides, after you send the check, Allah or Buddha will watch over
your ball bearings.

pac "true believer" plyer

(thank god for free speech at RAH, who knows, I might have bought one
of those things!)


Yeah Pac. "Hay" man still lives on while the people who sent in
deposits on the 2-seater wonder what happened to them. I guess Buddha
and Allah and Ferris Wheel will watch over them too. In fact they
have. Just the fact that they never got their machines delivered
means they got to live....maybe not forever *hay*, but longer anyway.


After re-reading this, I wonder how many people understand what I just
said? Ha Ha. I can see that you were here in them thar days Pac or
you wouldn't remember the illiterate conversations.

I got your phone number. I've just been flying all this week. If you
get to Vegas next weekend, call me. Just got back from Provo
yesterday. Damn IFR wx is getting me down. Our boss is buying us a
C-414 now. I get to spend today in it reading manuals on how to
operate that new Garmin 530 with the TCAS and the METAR links. That
think is so cool you can request the radar images from from
ground-based radar facilities through the satellites and get it in
real time from the ground stations. So, now we don't need expensive
on-board radar to see our way around imbedded thunderstorms, or TCAS.
They call the new traffic avoidance system, TIS (Traffic Information
System). It shows the targets that ATC is seeing and transmitting you
us on our moving map display. We get an audio alert when a new target
poses a problem to us. The computer calculates their position at the
next pass of the ground based radar antenna and projects that on my
screen. It also gives a vector showing which way the Target is
moving, his altitude and whether he is climbing of descending. Pretty
cool. Just takes hours and hours to read about and learn which
buttons to push. Hopefully I can do it about 20 times and get it down
to a reflex. This thing is also a VOR-LOC receiver with a glideslope
and a COM radio transmitter/receiver. There's a little button in the
bottom left corner that you push and it becomes a VOR, an ILS receiver
or a GPS that slaves an external HSI or even CDI's (for NAV or
Glideslope and Localizer). We have a flight director in it so the
fly-bars give me commands for fly-up/fly-down plus right and left
along with the HSI. It makes flying the thing so easy, a child could
do it.

I don't know how many of you have ever flown with a flight director
but it's years ahead of just watching a CDI on an approach. For
instance, the CDI on a localizer only shows your relative position to
the localizer. You could be drifting off with a wind change and never
know it until you get an actual change in posisiton of the CDI that
shows you are now off the beam. So, when you get that, you correct
and get back on. With a flight director, it looks at the rates that
things are changing. If you are dead on the beam but drifting, it
knows that and commands you to make a turn into the wind so you can
stay dead on. The damn localizer CDI never moves all the way down the
approach, but the fly-bars are twitching all over the place to make
you correct for what is going to happen to you if you don't. For
those of you guys who have had calculus, what it is doing is taking
the time derivative of your right/left and up/down position. If these
are changing in time (even though you are dead on the beam) the
fly-bars command you to do something about it before you ever get an
indication of being off course...because you never get off course.

In the olden days we didn't have that as I said above. You had to get
off the beam to get an indication in your CDI that you needed to
correct for. So, you drifted back and forth and back and forth across
the localizer all the way down. Made you nausious even.

Anyway, I gotta go sit in the airplane cockpit for a few hours and
read this stuff. I can't think of a better way to spend my day.

BWB


  #10  
Old February 19th 04, 08:52 PM
bryan chaisone
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Posts: n/a
Default

BWB,

I didn't know Allen, but I knew Gil. Gil's death was not pilot error
nor bad workmanship. It was bad design, and as you have said, bad
selection of non- AN hardware and engine. His machine and building
quality was excellent. I wonder what his wife Genie is doing now, I
lost her number. The poor woman just got married and her hubby was
taken away in such a manner.

Pacplyer,

The Russian truck engine is probably an improvement over the
over-taxed Rotax 582. Rotax makes good engines, just not for that
application.

The vietnamese guy,

I am sorry about your loss, ($30,000.00), that might as well be
$750,000.00 to us here in the US. The median income for vietnamese is
about $200.00/yr from what I hear.

Bryan Chaisone ~Fly safe, fly free~
http://www.alexisparkinn.com/rogue's_gallery_a-h.htm#C


was (pacplyer) wrote in message . com...
But dang that thing looked neat. Too bad the power to weight was so
lousy. And the hardware quality control was so lacking. And the
design was so questionable (my opinions only.) If I was surfing the
net in my rice paddy, I'd order up one too on the internet just from
the color shots alone. Not sure I'd go with the Russian truck engine
though! But *hay*, who wants to live forever right? ;^D

Besides, after you send the check, Allah or Buddha will watch over
your ball bearings.

pac "true believer" plyer

(thank god for free speech at RAH, who knows, I might have bought one
of those things!)


(Badwater Bill) wrote in message .. .
On Tue, 17 Feb 2004 04:51:35 GMT, "Dave" wrote:

from Fox News - too bad Le Van Danh chose a Mini 500 for his first project



HANOI, Vietnam (AP) - With directions from the Internet and an old Russian
truck motor, a Vietnamese farmer fulfilled his dream of making his own
helicopter. The job took two friends, seven years and $30,000.

Now, military officials say he can't fly it, because he didn't get approval
to build it, and they confiscated the makeshift copter.

"It's my hobby," farmer Le Van Danh complained by telephone Monday from his
hometown of Tay Ninh, in Vietnam's southwest. "I will do whatever I can,
including going to the prime minister, to get the permission."

True, he admits, the helicopter is still a work in progress: It only rises
about 18 inches off the ground. "We are in the process of a fifth test of
moving forward and backward, left and right," Danh said.

Getting approval to keep working on the chopper won't be easy. No Vietnamese
individual has ever been granted a government license to build an aircraft,
said Le Cong Tinh, director of the Air Transport Safety division of the
country's Civil Aviation Administration.

The farmer said he won't give up, vowing to sell his house or 25 acres of
land if that's what it takes to get the license. "If I cannot do it, my
children or my grandchildren will do it," he said.



That's really too bad in reality. This guy probably thinks he bought
a viable commodity; something that might take him aloft to self
actualize his most spiritual dreams of flight. From the little we see
written here it appears that he's hovered it (maybe) at 18 inches for
a bit. Depending upon how long he did that, he's probably worn it out
already.

Mine wore out in about 20 hours.

Let's see...$30,000 for 20 hours is about what?.....$1500/hr. Worst
cost to benefit ratio I ever saw for a homebuilder. I'm glad that
Fred Stewart gave it to me. Sorry for Fred's loss of money on that
deal.

This is the problem with what fetters did (in my HUMBLE opinion).
These kits were sold to anyone. All you had to do was be able to sign
your name on the check. I doubt that most of the buyers really knew
anything much about homebuilding. Most of the first time homebuilders
I met when they elected me the president of the builder's association
who built the Mini-500 helicopter had no other experience. They
didn't know if a castle nut, a pal nut or a nylock nut was required on
a component.

So they just blindly followed the plans and assembly instructions.

I mean, how many knew what type of bearings should have been used on
the main rotor transmission or if they were wrong? How about the
bearing in the tailrotor transmission? How many might know that needs
to be a special thrust bearing? How many might know how to use a
Chadwick tracking and balancing instrument to fine tune the moment if
inertia of the main and tail rotor blades so they don't tear the
machine apart when they spool it up?

So, this guy in Viet Nam with his life savings and a dream for flight
gets to buy this piece of ****, death trap, build it and attempt to
waste himself. Then to top it all off, he has to deal with the
Vietnamese government to fly it. Poor rice farmer! Duped from the
get-go and no where to turn.

Well, I have something to tell him if he could hear me. You are lucky
Mr. Vietnam Man. There are many who did fly it and they died. At
least you get to hold your children in your arms for another day and
tuck them into bed at night. Many others like my buddies Gil
Armbruster and Allen Barklage have been in the grave for many years
now from their faith in the Mini-500 while others proclaim their
destiny was from a lack of experience, or pilot error.

Yeah, right.

Allen with 32,000 (Thirty two thousand) hours of chopper time, punches
in and buys the farm in his Mini-500. Yep, must have been lack of
experience eh?

Have a nice day.

BWB

 




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