The wing attachment set up would have to be substantially altered, and the elevator on the xair std is extremely wide. The wings are designed to be removed, not folded.
How about a trip at 55 knots to pubs at Goulburn, Temora, Ivanhoe, Whitecliffs, Tibooburra, Camerons corner, Innaminka, Birdsville and then onwards through queensland back to moree and down again to Goulburn. Great pub crawl.
xair, differential cable toe brakes and steerable nose wheel. A little more direct than the gazelle but very similar.
Flew a lightwing with heel brakes, I guess its an acquired taste but found I kept putting the brakes on when I went to steer it.
If you haven't qualified as a terrorist yet, maybe...have you attended a training camp for terrorism, or taken up an apprenticeship in international terror in the last 2 years. Y/N
Hi all, I am currently planning a trip from Goulburn to Birdsville around early May. I will be travelling in my trusty Std Xair at an average of 55 - 60kts. I am able to use mogas as well as Avgas and am looking for info. I am tentatively planned the following, Goulburn to Temora (refuel) then to Ivanhoe (Ihave local contacts there for fuel and acommodation). From Ivanhoe I was thinking of Whitecliffs to refuel? then to Tibooburra for overnight and fuel. I will be landing at Camerons corner (because I can) then to Innaminka for fuel and a look around and then to Birdsville. I have 4hrs flying time plus 1/2 hrs emergency fuel per tank (91 lts).
Is this realistic, what should I be,or not be doing and any local advice for that time of the year. I will be carrying extra water and a sat phone for emergencies.
Any advice greatly appreciated
(I need to do this trip as the bucket list is starting to overflow!!)
When I started flying I was 150cm and 123kg. No problems fitting into a Gazelle or an xair. Maybe these later aircraft are made for "standard sized people".
Side slipping to slide into a limited landing area or short runway is a great way to steepen your approach without increasing your speed. Fun to practice and a valuable tool in your arsenal. Not much point having it demonstrated unless you are going to practice it. Great to wash off height on country airstrips or difficult landing areas.. Forward slip works great in heavy crosswinds and eases the strain on the landing gear as there is very little lateral thrust on a straight line, one wheel first, landing. Great tools to have in your skills arsenal and fun to practice.
Cheers
Maynard
John, your contribution, through these articles, to the safety of recreational pilots is tremendous. I have learned a lot from reading them and then putting your suggestions into my regular flight program. I regularly practice stalls, engine outs and recovery from unusual positions as part of the fun I have when flying. I have had a couple of engine outs and the information from your articles and my practice of your recommendations proved invaluable. I have placed your series on my favourites and essential reference lists.
Thank you
Maynard Robinson
At the risk of getting flamed, I think this will be the best move in recreational flying, both GA and Raa-Aus, that could have happenned to reinvent the sport. It has been discussed but this update is very welcome.
David, the door is the reverse image of the other one. Use the good door as a pattern and do it from there. Do you still have the aluminium tube frame? I would be very interested as to how it broke? Cheers
Maynard Xair - s 194919
Winsor, most people now want a plastic fantastic. They are after speed and distance. Quicksilvers and other open frame aircraft are normally used for the sheer love of flying. They dont seem to have, except for some diehards, the look or "kudos" of a "real" aircraft that a lot of people seem to need these days. I am sure Pud, myself and quite a few others would quite happily take any spares off your hands if you are giving them away:smile:. I don't think insurance for the private owner is a big deal but you may be right about the insurance on a leased aircraft.