I picked up my L2 on Saturday. Bolted on her is a new (rebuilt to new by Don's Dream Machines) C-85 supposedly kicking out the power 95 or so, horses. I've got a Sennsenich wood prop 72x42 and a Stromberg Carb. Good news first. It flies faster. Into a 5 knot wind I was still making 80-82 nautical miles of Kansas farmland pass under the L2s belly. So I calculate it's now about a 95-97 mile per hour plane at 2450 rpm. It's very quick on take off. Tail rise and nose lift off are faster but I can't give you a figure here. The climb was about 5-600 feet a minute... meaning 3-4 minutes to my standard 1500-2000 Agl cruise altitude. I felt like I was in complete control in every part of the flight regime as opposed to inputting a flight command and waiting for the plane to react then negotiating with it for the rest of the manuever. Which is a standard way to fly these very light birds.
I met some wonderful Army Blackhawk Drivers and their crews. They were transitioning from Ft. Leonard Wood in Mo. to Ft. Carson near Colorado Springs. They offered a straight up trade... my L2 for one of their Blackhawks. Seeing they were great guys but unlikely to actually sign off on the deal, I passed on their offer but thanked them for making my day.
Now the bad news. Twelve gallons of gas used to take me
nearly 225 miles. With the A-65 engine I'd burn 4.2 gallons
an hour and get 2 hours and 30-40minutes of flight time.
With the new "big engine" I'm 1 hour and 40 minutes...
1 hour and 50 minute legs tops. I think I've shorten the short little legs of this baby bird by about 40-50 miles per tank. Meaning on this trip (Wichita to Denver) I had 4 gas stops and could have driven the distance a little faster in my car. Given that some of my gas stops required me to call the FBO man and have him unlock the pump (a 30-40 minute wait) or have me inspect a US Army Blackhawk helicopter and talk to the pilots about a possible trade for my L2... afterall even fantasy bartering takes time. You can see the speed up in cruise is more than reduced by return trips to the ground. So shorter legs that run faster and climb faster too. I've got an L-2 on steroids. BUT, as with all the ball players that have used steroids know: The stuff will juice your performance but shorten your career... or in my case the distance between gas stops. There you have it and with regards; ED OBRIEN
I met some wonderful Army Blackhawk Drivers and their crews. They were transitioning from Ft. Leonard Wood in Mo. to Ft. Carson near Colorado Springs. They offered a straight up trade... my L2 for one of their Blackhawks. Seeing they were great guys but unlikely to actually sign off on the deal, I passed on their offer but thanked them for making my day.
Now the bad news. Twelve gallons of gas used to take me
nearly 225 miles. With the A-65 engine I'd burn 4.2 gallons
an hour and get 2 hours and 30-40minutes of flight time.
With the new "big engine" I'm 1 hour and 40 minutes...
1 hour and 50 minute legs tops. I think I've shorten the short little legs of this baby bird by about 40-50 miles per tank. Meaning on this trip (Wichita to Denver) I had 4 gas stops and could have driven the distance a little faster in my car. Given that some of my gas stops required me to call the FBO man and have him unlock the pump (a 30-40 minute wait) or have me inspect a US Army Blackhawk helicopter and talk to the pilots about a possible trade for my L2... afterall even fantasy bartering takes time. You can see the speed up in cruise is more than reduced by return trips to the ground. So shorter legs that run faster and climb faster too. I've got an L-2 on steroids. BUT, as with all the ball players that have used steroids know: The stuff will juice your performance but shorten your career... or in my case the distance between gas stops. There you have it and with regards; ED OBRIEN
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