Also none in the D model I once owned, N2906H.

But, if that author were considering ALL variants of Coupes made, figuring
the Forneys and Mooneys had pedals, and those Erco planes that have been
modified, maybe his 30% is about right.

Jerry E.
  -----Original Message-----
  From: [email protected] [mailto:[email protected]]on
Behalf Of John Craparo
  Sent: Tuesday, December 22, 2009 8:26 AM
  To: Syd Cohen
  Cc: Techlist Ercoupe
  Subject: Re: SPAM-LOW: RE: [ercoupe-tech] Article in AOPA magazine...



  No rudder pedals in my Ercoupe.

  John



  On Tue, Dec 22, 2009 at 7:21 AM, Syd Cohen <[email protected]> wrote:


    I've always told people who asked that I estimate that only about 30% of
the Ercoupes have been modified to the rudder pedal configuration.  But
that's an estimate only.  How about we take a poll of our members?



    I have no rudder pedals.


    Syd






    On Dec 22, 2009, at 7:30 AM, Jerry Eichenberger wrote:





      Perhaps he was speaking not only of the Erco models, but all of the
variants since then, up to the Mooney Cadet.
        -----Original Message-----
        From: [email protected]
[mailto:[email protected]]on Behalf Of Hartmut Beil
        Sent: Tuesday, December 22, 2009 6:24 AM
        To: [email protected]; Techlist Ercoupe
        Subject: SPAM-LOW: RE: [ercoupe-tech] Article in AOPA magazine...



        Carl.

        I'd say that the rudder pedals are still considered to be the
exception.


        Hartmut




------------------------------------------------------------------------
        To: [email protected]
        From: [email protected]
        Date: Tue, 22 Dec 2009 10:45:05 +0000
        Subject: [ercoupe-tech] Article in AOPA magazine...


        Merry Christmas friends and neighbors! Wanted to share that in the
January 2010 issue of AOPA's Flight Training magazine, author Mark Twombly
wrote an article about the differences in aircraft that are often subtle,
yet important for pilots to know when transitioning from one make or model
to another.

        Twombly wanted to give the reader a short history lesson about how
one would need to go back in aviation history to find truly unique aircraft
designs that reflected the personality of the actual designer. Naturally,
the author talked about our beloved Ercoupe and Fred Weick's vision of
building an aircraft that was as safe as possible and how he designed the
'coupe without rudder pedals. Twombly's inclusion of the Ercoupe's history
only covered a couple of paragraphs, and it seemed pretty much accurate
given my limited knowledge of Weick's overall design until he got to the
last paragraph that concluded his discussion of the Ercoupe. Here's what he
wrote:

        "Along with its distinctive puppy-dog appearance, the Ercoupe offers
the pilot a unique flying experience--cruising along with the side windows
slid down, arm on the sill and feet flat on the floor, literally steering it
with the wheel. Over time, however, the unique inter-connected rudder was
considered less of an asset, and most Ercoupes flying today have been
retrofitted with traditional rudder pedals." Flight Training Magazine,
January 2010 ed., p. 34

        It is the last sentence in the paragraph that I took exception with
but I am not an Ercoupe historian as some are on this Tech-list, so I didn't
send an email to the author to tell him that he's wrong on that last point.
Is he wrong? Or am I just not up on my Ercoupe history since I say that most
Ercoupes flying today have NOT been retrofitted with "traditonal rudder
pedals?" Inquiring minds would like to know...

        Respectfully,

        Carl LaVon






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