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To Fred and Scott: One word - AMEN!
I agree that the magnitude of error in airplanes cruising at 320 Kts will be
unacceptable with the standard GA breed of instrumentation. I erred due to
the fact that I have never seen those kind of numbers in anything I, or most
GA pilots, usually fly. I'm not happy about that, it's just a fact of life -
and two-place Lancairs just don't have the problem.
As far as the holes in the spar web are concerned, I remember way back when
Lance had only two employees - himself and Don G. - and he did a destructive
load test on the first wing structure. It broke at an equivalent G-load that
didn't satisfy him so he redesigned the spar ( increased the graphite lay-up
schedule on the caps) to raise the ultimate strength. I'm sure that test DID
NOT include data on a damaged spar-web.
On the other hand, I don't think I have ever encountered G-loadings that
even approached those test limits - and I've been in some extremely rough
air over the last 500 hours of N235SP 's life. Nonetheless, it's something I
would rether not have to consider, since one can't reliably predict what
kind of bumps one might run into just a minute ahead.
And on the other, other hand, we can do anything we want - that's why you
have to stick an "Experimental" label on your airplane.
Cheers,
Dan Schaefer
N235SP
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LML website: http://www.olsusa.com/Users/Mkaye/maillist.html
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