Capt. Geoffrey Thorpe
Touchdown! Greaser!
- Joined
- Jun 7, 2008
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- 16,022
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- DXO124009
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Light and Sporty Guy
One does need a medical / PP for that trip.Nice trip in a low and slow. It's on my bucket list.
One does need a medical / PP for that trip.Nice trip in a low and slow. It's on my bucket list.
One does need a medical / PP for that trip.
It's doable in LSA.. a Pipistrel Virus puttering along at 120knots sipping 3.8gph would be "low and slow" and entirely legal. I'm guessing a true LSA licensed only person would need radio/controlled airspace endorsement but it should be doable. whether or not you would want to, I dunno.. I suppose if I had the time/money to go low and slow it may be one of the best pilot experiences one could ever have.
of course i'd want to go the experimental route and have feathering proper 140knot cruise and slope soar a t the same time (ppl thusly required)
well, I take it back, does Canada not allow LSA overflight? would you have to ship to Alaska then fly again?
The Pipstral Virus is certificated as an airplane and not a self launch glider?
But I think the OP, Aviatrix wisely bailed on her own thread when all the nonsensical boasting and bickering started.
You said you love the 172....
I didn't say that.
Nope, still reading but definitely overwhelmed by the debate that has taken place.
I was suppose to have my second lesson yesterday but it canceled due to the airport just being ice from the blizzard so haven't been up in the Tecnam yet. I rescheduled for tomorrow so hoping the airport will be fine, my CFI will be checked out in the Tecnam and they will be dug out from the snow since I was told they were buried.
My second plane, and soon, will be a Cessna 120 or Cessna 140 (My wife wants one). Gotta shed a little debt and then my box hangar will be full, because I want both. If I only had an SPL, I'm not sure I could have either. Does a C-120 make it in to LSA? I think C-140s are a few lbs too heavy.
After re-reading the posts, is it true that after 120hrs of training you can do the MX on your LSA (not the experimental ones)?
The 120 and 140 are not LSA for the single reason that their gross weight of 1450 lbs exceeds the 1320 lb limit set in the LSA rules. Even if you were to own something that was compliant such as a J3 Cub, Taylorcraft, Luscombe 8A or Champ 7A Those are still not LSA aircraft, they are just certificated aircraft that a Sport Pilot could legally fly because they do not exceed any of the criteria required of LSA.
So no, you could not do maintenance on them as a certified LSA Repairman, only on aircraft that are certified as LSA.
But you could with a SkyCatcher?
The 120 and 140 are not LSA for the single reason that their gross weight of 1450 lbs exceeds the 1320 lb limit set in the LSA rules. Even if you were to own something that was compliant such as a J3 Cub, Taylorcraft, Luscombe 8A or Champ 7A Those are still not LSA aircraft, they are just certificated aircraft that a Sport Pilot could legally fly because they do not exceed any of the criteria required of LSA.
So no, you could not do maintenance on them as a certified LSA Repairman, only on aircraft that are certified as LSA.
Get a Sport cert first. When you fly your solo cross country, don't fly the Light Sport cross country, fly the PPL cross country. For every Sport requirement fly the PPL requirement that is applicable. Then take your Sport check ride. Now you can legally go fly around the pasture with a friend, while you are working on your PPL, and you have already done a bunch of the requireds for PPL.
Get a Sport cert first. When you fly your solo cross country, don't fly the Light Sport cross country, fly the PPL cross country...
I don't think the aircraft matters, you could get a Private license flying nothing but an Evecktor or Tecnam. It's the qualifications of the instructor that matter.
Thanks for all the input everyone. I'm still undecided just because I haven't been in the Tecnam yet. It seems forever until my next lesson due to her having a corporate trip and I'm going on a quick vacation as well. But hopefully she'll be checked out in it by then.
But let's say I do go the PPL route, is there any specific plane that you guys would recommend over another? The school has 2 152s, 3 Tecnams, 3 Piper Warriors (with Garmin 430), and only 1 172 (they have 3 others but they have nice GPS systems so therefore more expensive and would push my budget too much).
Thanks for all the input everyone. I'm still undecided just because I haven't been in the Tecnam yet. It seems forever until my next lesson due to her having a corporate trip and I'm going on a quick vacation as well. But hopefully she'll be checked out in it by then.
But let's say I do go the PPL route, is there any specific plane that you guys would recommend over another? The school has 2 152s, 3 Tecnams, 3 Piper Warriors (with Garmin 430), and only 1 172 (they have 3 others but they have nice GPS systems so therefore more expensive and would push my budget too much).
Which ever one is cheaper.
Based on the planes you listed, I would probably go with the C-152. It is likely the least expensive and is fun to fly.
Ah but she will do less total hours in the tecnam, hence cheaper. And 40 years newer, we are so used to old junk we are blind to how pathetic our old junk is
Remove ego/mutual appreciation and the bottom one is probably more fun. Where can one get primary instruction in a staggerwing? What is the hourly rate? Can renters take the staggerwing for overnights?
Do you really want to comment on the availability of aircraft wrt LSAs? But, I know where a Great Lakes and a few Stearmans are. Downown Aviation in Memphis comes to mind. Their Stearman is very reasonable(same wet rate as their citabria,about 150/hr IIRC), almost got my TW in it.
Choose wisely
On a nice day I'll take the bottom one every time.
Ultralights look fun for the same reasons I enjoy motorcycles.
. . . But I think the OP, Aviatrix wisely bailed on her own thread when all the nonsensical boasting and bickering started.
That's not an ultralight.
Remove ego/mutual appreciation and the bottom one is probably more fun. Where can one get primary instruction in a staggerwing? What is the hourly rate? Can renters take the staggerwing for overnights?
On a nice day I'll take the bottom one every time.
Ultralights look fun for the same reasons I enjoy motorcycles.
Exactly..
If there was a means and need for such a beautiful airplane I don't think LSA would even be on the table, but to put these two concepts out there as if they're the choice you're making.. silly at best. Unless the price of the two were comparable.. at all lol
CnS was just explaining to us how blind we are to the reality of how pathetic old planes are. I agree we are blind to it. One only needs to put an ancient relic like a Staggerwing beside a new Sporty LSA to open their eyes and see just how pathetic old the old planes are in comparison to the Sporty new LSAs.