The "sudden stoppage" verbage sounds like what's in the Rotax two-stroke manuals. They basically warn you not to fly over anything you can't land on, day/VFR only.
Can't vouch for Canada, but in the US, ultralights are NEVER airworthy.
Don't understand "but in the US, ultralights are NEVER airworthy".
Don't understand "but in the US, ultralights are NEVER airworthy". Are there restrictions on when and were you can fly ultralights?
In my 15-year homebuilt accident database, I track the number of accidents each engine type has, as well as the percentage of those accidents that were due to engine issues.And like I mentioned above, the 912 ROTAX is every bit as reliable as any cont. Or Lycoming engine provided one follows the factory protocol regarding maintenance which is not difficult, mostly common sense.