I think she is working both northland and Vasion.Cool! I didn't know Amy went to Vashon Aircraft.
If I understand it correctly, the owner of the company also owns Dynon. He probably gets a discount...The 162 lives on. Looks like a lot of money tied up in the panel.
Not shabby, but is it IFR?
Has to be stated in the operation mins by the mfg. So I'm "guessing" they'd be shouting about it if it's in their ops. At a min it would need some backup instruments. Maybe that's the "fully equipped" reference in the vid?
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If I recall correctly, IMC is no-go but IFR is ok.As a LSA isn't IMC out of the question?
No offense, but with that paint scheme, you would have to knock enough off the top so I could repaint it.
Otherwise, good luck.
I don't think so. Mfg has to have it in ops limits and of course needs to be equipped properly.As a LSA isn't IMC out of the question?
No offense, but with that paint scheme, you would have to knock enough off the top so I could repaint it.
Otherwise, good luck.
As a LSA isn't IMC out of the question?
Not shabby, but is it IFR?
Shy of a IMC plane, it seems a good deal of money tied up in a panel that you can't get much use out of, vs barebones with maybe couple G5s or something small and cheap to remove any need for a vac system or spinning gyros and maybe toss in a iPad so the kids won't get lost.
How do you not get use out of the flat-panel? It provides the same info that a six-pack does, and more. I would think it would make installation easier to plug in a couple of harnesses instead of having to wire certain instruments into the buss, vac lines, etc, in addition to having to have a separate radio stack. Also, as they mentioned, the glass panel is what many newer generation pilots look for in order to classify an aircraft as "modern". If you are trying to get sales from the 30-somethings, and it means you have to drop $15K instead of $5K for the panel in order to get the sales, I'd think it's a no-brainer anymore. I understand the "all I need is a 6-pack" sentiment, but there's little reason for any new aircraft not to go with current tech unless you're really worried about $10K on a $100K aircraft.
Hate to say it, but I don’t see it having any greater success than other very similar LSA’s on the market already. Nothing cutting edge about it that I can see.
I had to laugh when they said they wanted to produce an affordable airplane that was sub-100k in price.
*I wanted to come out of the store under $10.00 and by golly I did, only spent $9.99!*
For hard core VFR ops I really don't even need a full 6 pack, I'd rather it just be simple and light.
The problem with putting an 0-200 in an LSA is that the useful load suffers. I assume one of the roles that the Ranger was as a trainer, and it seems like it's simple and rugged, but 445 lbs useful load is maybe not quite enough. For typical trainer use if you put 15 gallons aboard you're OK with two average size people, so you're rather limited there.
In other words, just like a 150/152 then?
What engine would you rather see in it? Just curious.
Most LSAs use a Rotax 912 ULS/S, and I think that would be a good fit here.
One thing it has over a 150 is that rate of climb. That would be nice to have for pattern work. I learned in Grumman AA1s and we'd see 500 fpm on a soggy Georgia summer afternoon with the canopy open.