Precisely.  That's one of the reasons that I personally don't support any
move to increase the LSA gross weight limit.

If the 150 and similar airplanes were to come into LSA, the entire LSA
movement would become a graveyard of old 150s, etc. and we wouldn't see any
of the new and exciting airplanes now being sold, and others now being
developed.

Jerry E.
  -----Original Message-----
  From: [email protected] [mailto:[email protected]]on
Behalf Of Bill BIGGS
  Sent: Thursday, July 23, 2009 10:25 AM
  To: [email protected]
  Subject: RE: SPAM-LOW: [ercoupe-tech] legal LSA


    I think you are absolutely correct. There was a fellow that got a STC to
change a Cessna 150 to 1320 lbs. when the proposed rule making came out.

  My understanding this is the case that made the FAA put in the wording
"has since original certification"

  The EAA higher ups did not want the 150 specifically converted back to the
LSA category because it would have killed the market for brand new LSAs.

  Bill





----------------------------------------------------------------------------
--
  To: [email protected]; [email protected]
  From: [email protected]
  Date: Thu, 23 Jul 2009 09:45:51 -0400
  Subject: RE: SPAM-LOW: [ercoupe-tech] legal LSA


  The rules in this area are the way they are for a fairly good reason.

  FAA didn't want to see a bunch of STCs emerge to lower the gross weight of
several aircraft that are slightly over 1320, down to 1320 so they would
qualify as LSA.

  Such airplanes as the Cessna 120/140, later Champs, earlier Citabrias,
later Luscombes, etc. are all candidates for LSA if their gross could be
lowered by just a little built via the STC route.

  Again, we can't lose sight of the reasons behind the LSA in the first
place - LSA wasn't concocted just so pilots without medicals could continue
to fly old classic airplanes.  Mainly, the reasons behind the LSA movement
were:

  1.  Give the FAA some control over what had become the "heavy ultralight"
airplanes, getting their pilots licensed and the aircraft inspected and
licensed; and

  2.  To spurn new manufacturing and sales of a new "class" of aircraft.

  Jerry E.
    -----Original Message-----
    From: [email protected]
[mailto:[email protected]]on Behalf Of G. Davis
    Sent: Thursday, July 23, 2009 9:21 AM
    To: [email protected]
    Subject: SPAM-LOW: [ercoupe-tech] legal LSA



          The rules are very clear today; the plane must have met ALL LSA
standards since its certification. If at any point it has been altered so it
does not meet LSA standards, it can NEVER go back and be "made into an LSA".
I do look forward to the progress made on FAA changes/clarification of the
language though. Personally, I think a D model could be a C so very easy,
without changing the plane. Same plane, just a different gross wt. Makes
perfect sense to me, maybe that is why the FAA doesnt see it that way*L
          Gary










----------------------------------------------------------------------------
--
  Windows Live™ Hotmail®: Search, add, and share the web’s latest sports
videos. Check it out.

  

Reply via email to