Jump to content

Recommended Posts

Posted

Quick question.....

Does anyone know when - about what year - the RAAus 19- amateur-built registrations first began being issued?

(don't need to know anything else, no history, no nuthin....)

Thanks.

Posted
12 minutes ago, 440032 said:

Quick question.....

Does anyone know when - about what year - the RAAus 19- amateur-built registrations first began being issued?

(don't need to know anything else, no history, no nuthin....)

Thanks.

maybe not much help but my last xair was registered in feb 2001. 19 rego

  • Informative 1
Posted

RAAus began issuing their "19-" registration prefix for amateur-built and experimental kit aircraft in 1999. The very first aircraft officially designated under this amateur-built category was a Sapphire (registration number 19-3099), which was built and flown in February of that year.

  • Informative 2
Posted

My dad built an Avid and registered it 19- I think it finished with  025. It would have been maybe 1999 or 2000. Onetrack, is there any way I can look up records?

  • Like 1
Posted
2 hours ago, Student Pilot said:

My dad built an Avid and registered it 19- I think it finished with  025. It would have been maybe 1999 or 2000. Onetrack, is there any way I can look up records?

You can do an raaus rego search but you need the complete number.

Posted
11 hours ago, onetrack said:

RAAus began issuing their "19-" registration prefix for amateur-built and experimental kit aircraft in 1999. The very first aircraft officially designated under this amateur-built category was a Sapphire (registration number 19-3099), which was built and flown in February of that year.

Great, thank you, case closed.

  • Like 1
Posted
Quote

Onetrack, is there any way I can look up records?

Not to my knowledge. You just have to pick up "mentions" on the 'net. It would take a lof of effort and co-operation, to compile a comprehensive record.

  • Like 1
Posted
28 minutes ago, onetrack said:

Not to my knowledge. You just have to pick up "mentions" on the 'net. It would take a lof of effort and co-operation, to compile a comprehensive record.

Are you a member of raaus

Posted

Because members have access to an extensive record of almost every 

Aircraft . There are some holes in it because they lost some records going from paper to computer records. That's the rumour anyway.

Student pilot needs the whole reg number .

  • Like 1
Posted
3 hours ago, BrendAn said:

Because members have access to an extensive record of almost every 

Aircraft . There are some holes in it because they lost some records going from paper to computer records. That's the rumour anyway.

Student pilot needs the whole reg number .

Not a current member, it was AUF when I was a member. I will see if I can chase up the full rego.

Posted
1 minute ago, Student Pilot said:

Not a current member, it was AUF when I was a member. I will see if I can chase up the full rego.

Give me the number if you find it. 

Will pass it on to Nicki At raaus. She will find it unless it's in the lost pages.

  • Like 2
Posted
2 hours ago, Student Pilot said:

I was mistaken it was 28-482

FullSizeRender.thumb.jpeg.83a9001f91d6cefd3439b46dd9ded5fb.jpeg

I would be interested to know what happened to it.

That is a nice looking aircraft.

Is it a fisher koala.

Posted

Fisher made a lot of nice looking aircraft. All wood construction  with a Geodetic wing structure. Michael Fisher Hails from Ohio I think. The company had a Name change and then folded. There's probably still a lot about those Planes on the Net. I had a Horizon 2 STOL which(uniquely) had a steel tube fuselage. It was at one time on the RAAus register with a Continental 16F Motor. I purchased it out of Gympie. Light and dark green Paint. Nev

  • Informative 2
Posted

The red machine is an Avid Flyer. A Dean Wilson design which was the first (1983?) of the light cabin machines, originally designed with a 503 Rotax. He copied the wing folding design off a 30's aircraft. It evolved up to the Avid Magnum. Dean Wilson was taken on as a partner in the early days, he left then started Kitfox, virtually the same aircraft as an Avid. 
Dean Wilson designed quite a few aircraft, Elipse, Global Explorer and Eagle DW1 Ag biplane. 
28-482 was an Avid speedwing, a clipped wing version of the stol design. It cruised at 90 knots with a 582 Rotax. I think it was the first 28 aircraft on the AUF register.

  • Like 1
  • Informative 5
Posted

My Plane May have had aluminium tube fuselage with riveted gussets. . It resembled a Cessna Bird dog  with a rear view. .Full leading edge fixed slots and slotted flap. Fabric covered... Nev

  • Informative 1
Posted

I've seen quite a few Avid flyers. Competent if somewhat cramped,  planes. There would still be a place for them moreso If Rotax hadn't discontinued those Motors.Nev 

  • Like 1

Create an account or sign in to comment

You need to be a member in order to leave a comment

Create an account

Sign up for a new account in our community. It's easy!

Register a new account

Sign in

Already have an account? Sign in here.

Sign In Now
×
×
  • Create New...