OneCharlieTango
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OneCharlieTango
Lindberg, what “bunch of other things” did it do?
It had air conditioning!! Too bad the heat also had to be always on at full blast.Lindberg, what “bunch of other things” did it do?
Yahbut there are airplane designs from the 1930's that could have outdone it in almost every respect. He accomplished nothing new. And when someone makes that level of noise claiming they're going to reinvent the wheel they tend to get a lot of attention.
Hey, the best feature was that it didn’t kill him. Honestly, I thought it was going too.Lindberg, what “bunch of other things” did it do?
Since vaporware seems to be the rage nowadays maybe we could “reimagine” the Spartan Executive. I’m thinking carbon fiber airframe, pressurization and a PT-6 out front. I’m going to call it the Athenian Robber Barron. Non refundable reservations are starting at $5,000.The Spartan Executive, a single-engine GA aircraft of the 1930’s cruised at 215 mph, had a ceiling of 24,000’ and a 1000 mile range. If the Raptor could have met those humble performance goals (85 years later) it’s buyers would’ve been pleased, even if it was nowhere close to the original performance claims.
And it could have machine guns!The Spartan Executive, a single-engine GA aircraft of the 1930’s cruised at 215 mph, had a ceiling of 24,000’ and a 1000 mile range. If the Raptor could have met those humble performance goals (85 years later) it’s buyers would’ve been pleased, even if it was nowhere close to the original performance claims.
[...] maybe we could “reimagine” the Spartan Executive.
This would be awesome. Cirrus pilots cut people off on final while you could just shoot them down.And it could have machine guns!
The 10th airframe in the production run was modified into a military demonstrator, the Spartan 7W-F, incorporating two forward-firing .30 calibre machine guns mounted on the port side near the firewall and firing through the propeller arc through a synchronized mechanism. A further modification was to provide a gunner's station at a dorsal hatch on the roof with a windscreen and machine gun fitted. Provision was also made for bomb racks under the wings.[5]
Damn, that is an awesome plane. I’d never heard of it before, bummer that only 6 were ever made.A similar thing was done with the Beech 17:
http://www.airbum.com/pireps/PirepLionheart.html
I’d much rather have one of your Athenian Robber Barons, though.
At 450 horsepower I'd hope itd go 215The Spartan Executive, a single-engine GA aircraft of the 1930’s cruised at 215 mph, had a ceiling of 24,000’ and a 1000 mile range. If the Raptor could have met those humble performance goals (85 years later) it’s buyers would’ve been pleased, even if it was nowhere close to the original performance claims.
It flew and did a bunch of other things the nervous nellies here said it would never do.
Dude. Don't hold it in, the stress isn't good for you. Let it out, man. Tell us how you really feel.What would that "bunch of things" be? Does it include uncontrolled flutter during a high speed taxi, repeated engine overheating that kept it from flying in temperatures above 75° F, destruction of the engine because of an improperly installed seal, a litany of problems "fixed" with 4130 steel, tape, and chunks of lead, and finally catastrophic failure of the PSRU that caused it to crash?
The thing it didn't do was meet even one of its predicted performance metrics. It was an across the board oh-fer. A washout. A face plant. A zero.
Yeah, it flew. Barely. And it didn't take long before Muller's kluged together TLAR overweight and underperforming carbon fiber pig did what most people expected it would do. It crashed.
Taxied, took off, retracted the gear, made it out of the pattern, flew cross country, etc. It certainly didn't perform well, but this whole thread reminds me of a ridiculously overused quotation from Teddy Roosevelt:What would that "bunch of things" be?
Since vaporware seems to be the rage nowadays maybe we could “reimagine” the Spartan Executive. I’m thinking carbon fiber airframe, pressurization and a PT-6 out front.
In reality, there has been very little “nanny nanny boo boo” in the thread.Taxied, took off, retracted the gear, made it out of the pattern, flew cross country, etc. It certainly didn't perform well, but this whole thread reminds me of a ridiculously overused quotation from Teddy Roosevelt:
"It is not the critic who counts; not the man who points out how the strong man stumbles, or where the doer of deeds could have done them better. The credit belongs to the man who is actually in the arena, whose face is marred by dust and sweat and blood; who strives valiantly; who errs, who comes short again and again, because there is no effort without error and shortcoming; but who does actually strive to do the deeds; who knows great enthusiasms, the great devotions; who spends himself in a worthy cause; who at the best knows in the end the triumph of high achievement, and who at the worst, if he fails, at least fails while daring greatly, so that his place shall never be with those cold and timid souls who neither know victory nor defeat."
I have no dog in this fight; I'm just an amused bystander. But some of y'all just need to go design and build your own new aircraft models and show everyone how it's done. There's been some constructive feedback here, overshadowed by much more "Nanny, nanny, boo boo, I'm better than you."
And if my mother had wheels she'd be a wagon.The veloce 600 claimed performance seems to beat raptor ng. Pressurized twin capable of high altitude cruise.
https://www.trade-a-plane.com/searc...VELOCE+600&listing_id=2398146&s-type=aircraft
The veloce 600 claimed performance seems to beat raptor ng. Pressurized twin capable of high altitude cruise.
https://www.trade-a-plane.com/searc...VELOCE+600&listing_id=2398146&s-type=aircraft
Anyone else coping with Life after no more weekly Raptor Peter face plants?
Where'd he go?
I guess the flights would be about the same lengthElectric would be nice
Shocking allegations!Deep throat sez Big oil stepped in and kaboshed his plans. He had solid designs for a FL280 machine, 320kt all using sixteen special Lithium ion lantern cells.
He may have been “neutralized”.
I cannot reveal my sources.
I thought this thread was dead. What a pleasure it’s back in the mix.
I think they were all refunded. Peter was a **** engineer but not a crook.What happened to all the people that put down deposits? Were they refunded?
I think they were all refunded. Peter was a **** engineer but not a crook.
At least that’s my understanding. Worth what it cost you.
On the one hand, I'm impressed with their very steady progress. While it's taking them a long time, they are doing some heavy duty documentation to make certain they can produce a kit out of what they end up with. I am a bit underwhelmed with the choice of carbon fiber for the project. I don't think it has advantages over fiberglass composite to justify the increase in costs. I suspect they'll have a viable kit at the end, though I truly do wonder who's going to buy it.If you're bored, you can start obsessing over DarkAero's progress. I suspect they will eventually create a usable airplane, but will miss their weight and performance goals.
If you're bored, you can start obsessing over DarkAero's progress. I suspect they will eventually create a usable airplane, but will miss their weight and performance goals.