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Kev

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Posts posted by Kev

  1. Please file a Defect Report.

     

    This is an important and necessary step in the dissemination of the information and ultimately the rectification of any recurring defect.

     

    If you are HGFA registered, the Defect Report may be filled out on-line on the HGFA website.

     

    If you are RAAus registered, the Defect Report is available from your Technical Manual Section 43-3.

     

    Safe Flying

     

    Kev

     

     

  2. What about the Jab who was caught by Brisbane tower flying above 13000ft? He was asked if he was IFR, replied no and was promply ordered down to below 10000ft . I wonder if he was ever reprimanded? Lucky for others that he was quite happily broadcasting his height even though he was not allowed to be there...I wonder if he was GA or RAAus?

     

     

  3. The latest from the HGFA:

     

    Two wings – One Rego



     

     

     

     

     

     

     

    Quite a few of our members, particularly instructors, operate with more than one wing for their Trike. Well, good news – effective immediately, you may now register multiple wings with a single trike base under a single Registration Number.

     

    Additionally, if you should choose to upgrade to a later model wing, you may retain your old Registration Number. If the old wing is to be scrapped or sold on, it must be de-registered, and the registration number removed.

     

    Obviously, for trikes registered under CAO 95.32/LSA, only trike/wing combinations that are certified by the manufacturer may be registered.

     

     

    The new HGFA Microlight logbook is now available on the HGFA website for downloading and printing and this will facilitate the recording of maintenance, as it includes a separate logbook for each wing, as well as the engine.

     

    The new HGFA Operations Manual mandates a separate logbook for both the engine and each wing. The reason for this is the HGFA have recognised the fact that there has previously been no facility for maintenance records to be included with these items when sold.

     

    This mandate applies to new registrations only, so current aircraft may continue to run with their existing Maintenance Logbooks.

     

    I would like to thank our General Manager, Craig Worth, for helping to achieve this. I feel that this is a definite step forward in Flight Safety for the HGFA and look forward to helping to improve other areas of concern in the near future.

     

    :thumb_up:

     

    Safe Flying

     

    Kev

     

     

  4. Tuesday, March 23, 2010 » 05:17pm

     

    Telstra BigPond News and Weather

     

    A cancer survivor will attempt to become the first person to fly around the world in a gyrocopter.

     

    A cancer survivor from Northern Ireland has launched a daring attempt to become the first person to fly around the world in a gyrocopter - a tiny rotor-powered aircraft with an open cockpit.

     

    Norman Surplus hopes to fly around 480km a day to complete the 27,000-mile solo journey by mid-July.

     

    After setting off from a field in Larne, on the coast north of Belfast, Surplus plans to travel east to west and take in 26 countries.

     

    He will stop off daily to refuel and rest, a spokesman told AFP.

     

    Surplus will also be making a big detour to avoid flying over China, because it was 'too difficult' to get the necessary permission, the spokesman added.

     

    The 47-year-old businessman - who was diagnosed with bowel cancer in 2003 - intends to raise money for cancer research along the way.

     

    'Before I got cancer I had never done anything like this,' he said.

     

    If Surplus manages to circumnavigate the globe in his little yellow autogyro, a predecessor to the modern helicopter, he will be setting a new world record.

     

    'It's the only type of aircraft in the world that hasn't made it round the world. Someone tried in 2005 but he was stopped by the monsoon in India,' explained Surplus - who has timed his trip to avoid the rainy season there.

     

    'Good Luck' to him and here's hoping he has a safe trip 011_clap.gif.c796ec930025ef6b94efb6b089d30b16.gif

     

     

  5. Alf,

     

    To my knowledge, the HGFA currently has no plans to get rid of their trike membership. In fact, they are actively trying to re-register previous members who have lapsed.

     

    Secondly, although the rego letters are affixed to the wing, it is the aircraft that is registered - not the wing. The wing is an interchangeable part of the aircraft.

     

    I have sent you a PM regarding your rego.

     

    Safe Flying

     

    Kev

     

     

  6. Alf

     

    I kept my original HGFA Rego when I sold my Streak 1 and bought a Streak 11B for the Edge-X (a couple of years ago). All I did was complete a change of registration details notification form (after phoning the office to confirm I could keep my rego).

     

    I removed the numbers off the old wing though, as I was selling it - might be worth checking again as all you are doing is 'de-registering' your old wing?

     

    Safe flying

     

    Kev

     

     

  7. An Airborne XT912 with all extras: chute,radio,intercom,helmets etc sets you back 80 grand.

    ......or you can buy a 912s for around 63k (without a chute). With the exchange rate from UK being so good at the moment this drops to around $51k :thumb_up: We burn around 9.3 ltrs/hour (Premium Unleaded) so fairly cheap to run.

     

    Our previous Edge X 582 used about 12 ltrs/hr so equally cheap to run and just as much fun to fly.

     

    Safe flying

     

    Kev

     

     

  8. JC,

     

    The differential pressure test should be carried out iaw the Rotax Manual. The engine should be at operating temperature (oil temp 50-70 degC) and the supply pressure should be between 80 and 87psi. The maximum allowable drop is 25%. Leakage is expected past the piston rings (detectable by oil tank burbling). Any leakage past the inlet valve will see air coming out of the relevent carburetor and leakage past the exhaust valve will see air exiting from the exhaust. The correct equipment must be used. Smaller engines (including Rotax) require a 0.04in restrictor in the test equipment. Larger engines have a larger restrictor - take note if you ever choose to purchase one.

     

    Values or comparative results from other types or makes of engine are not relevent.

     

    Your results are within limits. :thumb_up:

     

    Safe flying

     

    Kev

     

     

  9. Men in microlight crash drunk - CAA

     

    Thu, 19 Nov 2009

     

    Two men who died in a microlight crash in northern Hawke's Bay last year were drunk, a Civil Aviation Authority (CAA) investigation has found.

     

    Each was said to have downed 20 beers before taking to the air, the investigation said today.

     

    Darren John McNay, 39, and Antony Donald Bell, 30, both of Wairoa, left Wairoa Aerodrome in the microlight about 3.15am on May 25.

     

    Mr McNay, a pilot with 220 flight hours, and Mr Bell, an instructor with 560 flight hours, died after the microlight crashed about 400 metres from the runway. The two men had been drinking at a party before taking the microlight out in the dark.

     

    A third person, who had also been at the party, raised the alarm, after they did not return.

     

    Searchers found the wreckage about 7.30am.

     

    Both men were heavily intoxicated at the time of the crash, the CAA report said.

     

    Mr Bell's blood alcohol level was 320 milligrams per 100 millilitres of blood and Mr McNay's 236 milligrams. The legal limit for driving a car is 80 milligrams. Tests also indicated Mr McNay had used cannabis before the flight.

     

    Their friend, who raised the alarm, told police they had drunk about 20 beers each before the flight.

     

    Strong winds, passing rain and poor visibility created unsuitable conditions for the plane to be flying, the report said.

     

    "This would have been a challenging flight even if the instructor and the pilot's performance had not been impaired.''

     

    Mr McNay had no night flying experience and Mr Bell, though previously rated to fly at night, was not at the time certified to carry passengers or instruct in night flying. The plane was not certified to fly at night, the report said.

     

    "It is probable that the pilot and the instructor became spatially disorientated after losing reference to the ground lights and/or flying into low cloud or rain.''

     

    A post mortem found both men died from injuries sustained in the impact, which likely happened on their return to the runway, the report said.

     

     

  10. Just heard:

     

    Tuesday, December 29, 2009 » 03:17pm

     

    A man's been killed in a gyrocopter crash east of Adelaide, near the Murray River.

     

    The crash has occurred about one o'clock this afternoon, a few kilometres from the riverside town of Mannum and was reported to police from houseboats on the river.

     

    Police say when emergency services reached the scene they found the man, aged about 50, had died.

     

    It's not known whether anyone else has been hurt in the crash.

     

    Gyrocopters are small aircraft typically capable of carrying only one or two people.

     

    Terrible news - does anyone know any more?

     

    Kev

     

     

  11. Ray,

     

    Loading the trike is no problem, as the nosewheel castors. To stop the nosewheel cocking when unloading, I use two straps around the passenger steering bar to secure it in the neutral position.

     

    No answer for keeping the front down other than do it carefully. I don't use a winch, but push it on/pull it off from the prop hub.

     

    Fly safely

     

    Kev

     

     

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