Sluggo63
Pattern Altitude
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- Oct 9, 2013
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Sluggo63
No chute, lack of johnson bar.
"The super-thin wings are no longer doubling up as fuel storage. Instead, fuel is stored in a bladder atop the fuselage. This, the company says, will make the plane capable of floating for long periods in the event of an emergency water landing."
Wings would have to move way forward from where they are shown in the picture for that to work. Plus you have 6 wingtips for lots of induced drag.Looks like a good idea to me, no energy wasted with force going the opposite direction of gravity to keep the main wing flying.
Marketing....Wings would have to move way forward from where they are shown in the picture for that to work. Plus you have 6 wingtips for lots of induced drag.
I think someone released this two weeks ahead of time.
because everyone rode her?And if my grandmother had wheels she'd be a wagon...
Looks like something straight out of Kerbal Space Program.
That looks a lot more feasible...The same sort of skepticism arose over the Eviation Alice:
It might fly. Or maybe it would have flown, except it caught fire and was was heavily damaged.That looks a lot more feasible...
It might fly. Or maybe it would have flown, except it caught fire and was was heavily damaged.
But props on the wingtips? Especially on a taildragger? How does one slip for a crosswind landing? You sure can't land a taildragger in a crab. And that rear prop right aft of the tailwheel which will fling stones up into it?
What happens if one of the wingtip motors fails on takeoff?