Mailing List lml@lancaironline.net Message #850
From: John Cooper <heyduke@digital.net>
Subject: Re: hello and introduction
Date: Thu, 15 Oct 1998 19:08:07 -0400
To: <lancair.list@olsusa.com>
         <<<<<<<<<<<<<<<<--->>>>>>>>>>>>>>>>
         <<  Lancair Builders' Mail List  >>
         <<<<<<<<<<<<<<<<--->>>>>>>>>>>>>>>>

Any properly applied paint will block UV radiation, but in Tucson you will
want to hangar a fiberglass airplane regardless. The heat will warp them.
These planes will melt at 200 degrees or less!

Yes, painting involves *very* hazardous chemicals. Supplied air respirators
are mandatory. Or better yet, allocate $5-$10,000 for somebody else to do
it. IMO the preparation and painting is the absolute *worst* part of
building one of these things.

<<1500 hours>>> Haaaaaaaa-haaaaaaaaaaa! Not to scare you off, but I spent
that much time just preparing the aircraft for painting after it was
essentially completed. I have been building my L-235 for ELEVEN years now!
(Most folks seem to finish them in 4-6 years.) Over three-quarters of the
people who buy kits never finish them, so some self-analysis is in order
before taking on a project like this. (This is not hyperbole. Over 250
L-235 kits were sold, and as near as I can tell, less than 40 are flying.)

The cockpit of the L-235 is very comfortable for a 6foot/250pounder like
me. I have flown for 3 hours in my friends' with no seat cushions at all -
no problem. But OTOH there is not a lot of room for chart bags and
miscellaneous junk. It's very compact, but as I said, comfortable on long
trips. Very sweet flying machine.

<<is there an emergency gear deployment system if the regular system fails?>>
Yes. A bypass valve is opened and the MLG fall by gravity and lock into
place. The NLG has a gas spring to assist it.

<<how is the pilot warned if he is about to land with the gear up?>>
Nothing is supplied with the kit. All instruments, avionics, and electrical
installations are completely up to the builder.

<<are the flaps powered or manual?>> Powered. Electric linear actuator.

<<tilting canopy - what's the normal canopy do?>> The old-style canopy like
I have has a parallogram arrangement that lifts the canopy up, forward,
then back down while maintaining a horizontal attitude. Works OK, some
don't like it. Can limit the number of radios you can install in your stack
due to a crossover arrangement behind the panel.

<<larger wheels>> If you intend to land on turf strips. You will pay a drag
penalty.

<<canopy latch>> This is so you can lock the canopy from the outside after
you have tied down the aircraft. No provision was made for doing this in
the original kit.

<<wing tip extensions>> Better high-altitude performance, I think.

<<can anyone put me in contact with a builder working on one in or near
tucson?  i'd really like to get a feel for the work>> Good idea. If nobody
on this list pipes up, then call the factory and they will put you in
contact with somebody nearby.
Subscribe (FEED) Subscribe (DIGEST) Subscribe (INDEX) Unsubscribe Mail to Listmaster