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Kyle Communications

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Everything posted by Kyle Communications

  1. Flightrite...if you build it they will come....oh sorry wrong line 🙂 Its really no different for Group G...factory builts are supposed to be L2 or LAME serviced ..of course mandatory for a aircraft being used for training. Not so for private flying and not online Build your own then totally different kettle of fish. I prefer to build. If you buy a GA aircraft say a C152 then the expectation will be the same servicing regeim...its only the licencing of the pilot really that changes and that is really only type ability to fly them
  2. Beyond me..although in my RC modelling days when you balanced a model it was always somewhere around that when you lifted it up with your fingers. There would be some calc to do with centre of pressure and moment but I am sure you could find it on the net somewhere. I just go on the manufacturers chart and do the plots. Iprefer to balance a bit more to the tail as it just makes the aircraft fly better but of course you must be well aware of this when loading it up
  3. RAA just did a update on the 760kg..so maybe all underway by the end of the year
  4. Common issue with the Microair..they wander off frequency internally..the VCO inside is crap....the radio has been a very bad one..just badly designed I refused to look at them after being bitten so many times...repair retune them...3 to 6 months later same issues
  5. On my flap bracket I made the notches a little deeper so the lever doesnt jump out
  6. Bob has my flap bracket which you can see in his last picture...the full flap position is exactly the same for flap angle as the original. The geometry I made it so that it has the same travel but its all at th different angle. Then of course I the extra position. The first stage of flap with my bracket is about 1/3 of the full range and the second stage is about 2/3 of the range. I found I use the first position for pretty much everything. The second position was for when I wanted shorter landings and pretty much never used the original full flap position as it was too aggressive especially if it was a bit windy. At full flap when its windy the Sav tends to waffle quite a bit as Don says so the repositioning really makes a difference on landings Mark
  7. Bob. do the tail down test...it should just sit there..if you cant hold it there without hardly any pressure then you are too nose heavy...by the sound of the nosewheel dropping down that was just like mine...way too nose heavy
  8. With Mabel being a S model and the battery behind the pilot I wont know until I get it finished but I have put the battery frame in that position but I do no expect the battery to be there. I think mine will be in the front near the firewall inside the cabin. The reason is Mabel has 20 thou side skins not 16 thou so it will be heavier in the rear a little bit and its a long moment. I will set it up exactly the same. I will do the W&B and see where it comes to on the chart and most likely set it up to do the same tail on the ground test. I am pretty sure this is the W&B that I did after I shifted the battery..its close to the tail heavy side
  9. The position of the antibalance trim is of course a function of CG also any deviation between your wing incidence and tailplane incidence. When I first flew my XL the battery was in behind the pilot..thats where the manual said to put it. The plane was noseheavy ..it wasnt a joy to fly really ..I couldnt keep the nose up on landing. I saw though on the web guys had the battery in the tail section and also there were holes there as well so I shifted the battery back there. What a difference. The planeflew very differently and I changed away from the manual for the trim tab dimensions and set it to how I liked it. My display I setup so it was positioned vertically and I set it so that level flight was 2 LEDS off at the top and full trim was no LEDS at the bottom.. I then set the trim tab in small increments so it flew level in cruise with the 2 LEDS off at the top. No LEDS was landing with flaps and I just needed slight pressure on the stick with flaps. My antibalance tab was a bit higher than the spec which meant my aircraft CG was a little to the rear. I found if you put the tail on the ground it would stay there and only take about 1 to 2 kg of weight to lift it so that it would then want to put the nose back down onto the ground. Most with Savs I have talked to the tail would not stay on the ground at all. I tried many different setups and this is the one I ended up with and it flew just great. It was a joy to fly...and land Mark
  10. Same here Jack :).....its getting closer but still got a bit to do on Mabel. The day Mabel gets moved out to the hangar.... "The Mistress" will be begin 🙂
  11. I recently had my rebuilt Sav S painted by a local car painter...he did a nice job. I supplied the paint which probably cost more than what i paid for the painting. The paint was ex Virgin airlines Akzoknoble which apparently is std airbus paint. It was done in a booth. It cost me $5200. He did all the alu prep and the undercoat..sanding and painting of everything..I still have the cowl to do yet though but I may do that myself. The painting is the easy part but the prep is a killer. I painted my last Sav and the prep was the worst part. The S-21 i will most likly get him to do that as well..it takes a whole lot of grief out of the build. The average I hear from most people is a car painter will charge somewhere between 8 to 10k for a simple paint job now. You will spend 3 or 4 times the time to prep than to do the actual painting..thats what your really paying for
  12. Another one will bite the dust shortly I think...gets very interesting 1/3 of the way in
  13. You need to move up here to gods own country..we have about a week of 5 deg or 7 deg then its warmer every day :)..just need aircon for summer 🙂
  14. John. dont start me on that subject.....I want to hit the TV or smash the radio whenever the bullsh#t flows with the pollies
  15. Replacement CDI for Rotax..new throttle system for Rotax, modified flap brackets for Savannahs....hahahah oh thats my spare time. We manufacture a Salt Water pool chlorinator. Well a couple of differnet models because we are a OEM we rebadge the unit for 7 different companies and of course have our own brand...all the big companies use our unit now as we have the best quality and warranty. Our failure rate is under 0.5% most others are between 30 and 40%..this is why all the big companies now use ours We make them out at Woodford about 25km N/W of Caboolture and employ 13 people. We also use the maximum amount of locally made products we can. For exmple today we just had 15km of the cable we use to attach the cell it is a multicore cable with 2 of 6mm main DC cable and 4 of 1.5mm cables. It is all made in Victoria. All our plastics are injection molded up at the sunshine coast. Connectors are all sourced from local suppliers. We only buy in from another country what we can not get done here at a reasonable price. Sometimes its actually a bit more expensive here but we use the local supplyer Sorry its a bit off topic
  16. Over 95K with infrastructure like power/lighting cameras etc
  17. You are spot on Bob...I have had a couple of companies try to "copy" my designs...Well exactly as you say because they dont understand the theory behind the design or the selection of parts and placement they come up with something that sort of works but doesnt. The theory in my designs requires a lot of AC switching theory and transformer conduction and quite a bit of special ancillory component design. In this industry they all seem to copy and just perpetuate all the mistakes. No one yet has mangaged to actually even get close. No one can seem to innovate they all copy all their own mistakes..no one seems to have ever started with a clean sheet like I did. The design has been evolving over the past 7 years but it did take around a year of development to get it right
  18. Keating ruined a lot of stuff but not the caravan industry..trailers yes..caravans no...up here near me there are literally 20 caravan makers and they are all booked out for like more than a year with sales
  19. https://astronaerospace.com/
  20. Appears to be still on the drawing board but now being backed and patents done...here is a link I found https://www.whichcar.com.au/features/how-the-astron-omega-1-engine-is-reviving-the-rotary-engine-concept
  21. I dont know if its running..I stumbled accross it on my youtube feed I will see if there is anything or its a concept engine
  22. I spend half of my time at work currently trying to source particular components now. Some are literally unobtainium now...lead times are anywhere from 12 month to 18 months delivery. The majority of our electronic components are infact made in China or Asia. We use Microchip processors and also some other Microchip parts like RTC (real time clock) chips. These are actually made in a Microchip plant in Thailand. The chinese have difficulty getting them now so we organise these chips and get them freighted here to us then we send them on to our manufacturer in China. Most of the passive components are Yageo or kemet which are high quality passives but also made either in China or Thailand by those major companies. There are quite a few chips like regulators and hall effects transducers and capacitive touch and temperature sensors we are using now that are chinese made in chinese factories because we have not been able to source the originals we were using due to the world wide chip shortages. These Chinese made versions are excellent and working perfectly....to give you a example we used previously a Texas Instruments temperature sensor but we went to the chinese version and the failure rate is actually better than the TI version by about 70% The failure rate is super small anyway like only 5 chips in 30,000 which is very good in the time frame. Our heatsinks are all made in China as no one in australia does metal injecting anymore...the company we use for that is also excellent we use 15,000 a year plus and maybe 10 out of those maybe rejected. Transformers we used to make ourselves here but now we use a chinese company who makes them to our design parameters...for less than half the price we can make them for..we had to go through 3 manufacturers to find one that made them to a high standard every time..that company is also excellent. So the argument that all chinese manufactured stuff is crap is just not true at all...we do pay a bit more for this quality but it is certainly there and repeatable. We make and sell the most popular unit in the country and sales just keep increasing literally every day and more companies are getting out unit..we rebadge the same unit for 7 different companies. The only way to know if this copy rotax is any good will be time and numbers. Until then no one will know
  23. Flyboy is correct. You get what you pay for in China. I work for a australian manufacturer and we make our product here. We source our parts from many places around the world. All of our cell material comes from the USA as it is the best..there is chinese stuff but we donr use it. The base titanium the americans use to make their product comes from China though. The titanium is is good and no issues..the coatings that are heated onto it is done by the USA company. Our electronics are made by by a chinese company and we can get them made eslewhere in China for a cheaper price but we use a company that actually manufactures LCD displays..they also do complete component sourcing and assembly . They only use genuine parts supplyers not dodgy ones although twice now they have had some issues with counterfiet parts. The electronics company there have been devastated that this happened and have taken measure of sacking their suppliers that did this. Our failure rate on our product is less than 0.5%...our competitors have a average failure rate of 40% or more. This is why you get what you pay for. Yes you can get very good equipment from China if you know what you are doing and are prepared to pay the money. This is why Iphones etc are a lot more expensive than the others. As far as the copy Rotax goes well the jury is out as I know there are quite a few out there operating now but I havent heard anything bad yet about them at all but of course longevity of the product is yet to be seen.
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