Re: Fuselage strut fitting - FAA Airworthiness Concern Sheet (merged)
(sorry, off topic)
I dunno. I may have to. Looking at several off-airport videos of the plane I can see a case for building it with the nosewheel. The shape of the fuselage REALLY does not lend itself to a tailwheel on that design. The way the plane is landed on short curved roads and such in the video makes me think that a good heavy duty nosewheel setup might be a necessary evil for this airplane.
Then again there is a tailwheel option sold by the factory, but it re-uses the existing main gear which makes the plane look even uglier (if that's possible).
I did a little amateur photo bashing on a picture of one of the customer built tailwheel versions. I lengthened the main gear, rotated the plane to ah igher ground angle, and changed thenose art from Betty Boop to Bugs Bunny. Check out this "artists concept" of what a taller tailwheel 701 might look like.
Originally posted by T.Taylor
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I dunno. I may have to. Looking at several off-airport videos of the plane I can see a case for building it with the nosewheel. The shape of the fuselage REALLY does not lend itself to a tailwheel on that design. The way the plane is landed on short curved roads and such in the video makes me think that a good heavy duty nosewheel setup might be a necessary evil for this airplane.
Then again there is a tailwheel option sold by the factory, but it re-uses the existing main gear which makes the plane look even uglier (if that's possible).
I did a little amateur photo bashing on a picture of one of the customer built tailwheel versions. I lengthened the main gear, rotated the plane to ah igher ground angle, and changed thenose art from Betty Boop to Bugs Bunny. Check out this "artists concept" of what a taller tailwheel 701 might look like.
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