Perhaps, but even if the FAA allowed such a change to the 787 Type
Certificate, the Catch-22 could still be the definition of LSA contained
in FAR 1:

 

Light-sport aircraft means an aircraft, other than a helicopter or
powered-lift that, since its original certification, has continued to
meet the following:

 

Roy

________________________________

From: [email protected] [mailto:[EMAIL PROTECTED]
On Behalf Of Hartmut Beil
Sent: Monday, August 18, 2008 10:30 AM
To: [email protected]
Subject: {POSSIBLE_SPAM}: [HEUR] [ercoupe-tech] Re: Keep Your Fingers
Crossed!
Importance: Low

 

I believe the FAAs thinking was that light weight, slow flying airplanes
are limited in the damage they can do in an event of failure of pilot or
airframe.
Add the fact that you can only seat another passenger, you are putting
only ONE person aside the pilot in danger.
 
That as principle. Minimize the potential damage.
 
As I pointed out several times, the problem for all Ercoupe Types can
easily be solved when Univair asks the FAA for an amendment to their 787
Type Certificate.
 
It would read that all these above aircraft (415 D,E,G, F, Alon ,
Mooney) can be flown under LSA rules by limiting the gross weight to
1260 lb .  This gross weight limitation can be upped with the Skyport
STC. 
 
Going this way, the O-200 installations might not certify for a LSA
conversion and the elevator must be rigged to a certain degree or
whatever the special rule might be. But the difference between all these
Ercoupes is so little that it is even for an insider hard to tell. Also
The difference do not affect the flying capabilities of our Coupes. All
415 Ercoupes can be rigged to fly like a 415-C . It is just a matter of
the elevator restriction.
 
 
Hartmut
 

 

________________________________


To: [EMAIL PROTECTED]; [email protected]
From: [EMAIL PROTECTED]
Date: Mon, 18 Aug 2008 10:08:49 -0400
Subject: RE: [ercoupe-tech] [ercoupe-flyin] Re: Keep Your Fingers
Crossed!



I don't have time today to go into this in detail, but the combination
of max weight and max speed was carefully thought out.  Kinetic energy
is a function of mass going at a certain speed.

 

The industry committee wanted to keep kinetic energy limited, since it's
this energy that dictates in good part the performance of the airplane,
and the needed training, skill, currency, etc. for the pilot.  We all
agree that it takes more of all of that to manage the energy in a 747
than in a Coupe - just an example of why kinetic energy was chosen as
one of the prime determinants of the limits of an LSA.

 

Jerry E.

        -----Original Message-----
        From: [email protected]
[mailto:[EMAIL PROTECTED] Behalf Of mbpowell
        Sent: Monday, August 18, 2008 9:36 AM
        To: [email protected]
        Subject: [ercoupe-tech] [ercoupe-flyin] Re: Keep Your Fingers
Crossed!

        
        It seems to me that if the LSA industry wanted higher weight
limits 
        they would be lobbying for an increase. I don't think this is 
        happening although requests for more safety features might drive
them 
        to it in the future. 
        
        Mike @ C35
        
        --- In [email protected]
<mailto:[email protected]> , "Jerry Eichenberger" 
        <[EMAIL PROTECTED]> wrote:
        >
        > Lee -
        > 
        > No Federal agency, including FAA, makes a general rule that 
        benefits only a
        > few. The FAA thinks "industry wide". While it's unfortunate
that 
        a very
        > few may suffer, lots more pilots are benefiting tremendously.
        > 
        > Jerry
        > -----Original Message-----
        > From: [email protected]
<mailto:[email protected]>  [mailto:ercoupe-
        [EMAIL PROTECTED] <mailto:[EMAIL PROTECTED]> ]On
        > Behalf Of [EMAIL PROTECTED]
        > Sent: Monday, August 18, 2008 9:20 AM
        > To: [EMAIL PROTECTED]
        > Cc: [EMAIL PROTECTED]; [email protected]
<mailto:[email protected]> 
        > Subject: RE: [ercoupe-tech] RE: [ercoupe-flyin] Re: Keep Your 
        Fingers
        > Crossed!
        > 
        > 
        > 
        > Jerry E. said.
        > 
        > Be careful kicking a sleeping dog. I had no personal
involvement 
        in the
        > development of the LSA and SP rules, but have friends who did.
        > 
        > I didn't include Jerry's entire message as you have most
probably 
        read it.
        > Some of what he said is correct. However, we should remember
that 
        most of
        > the folks that a weight increase would affect are not those
that 
        would be
        > purchasing the new expensive planes. It would simply allow
some, 
        that are
        > selling their coupes because of an inability to pass a FAA
medical, 
        to keep
        > their planes and fly them. They can't fly them so they sell
them 
        or keep
        > them around to sit in and run up once and a while to bring
back 
        memories.
        > 
        > Just my opinion.
        > Lee
        > 
        > 
        > __________________________________________________________
        > Click for free quote on refinancing your mortgage.
        >
        
        

 

 

________________________________

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