I'd buy you a round at the local bar had I heard that in person.Big Pistons Forever wrote:I never did understand why people wanted to fly their lawn furniture.

Moderators: North Shore, sky's the limit, sepia, Sulako, Right Seat Captain, lilfssister
I'd buy you a round at the local bar had I heard that in person.Big Pistons Forever wrote:I never did understand why people wanted to fly their lawn furniture.
Exactly we are 100 years removed from that for the hope of progress so we don't have to fly contraptions like the Wright Flyer. Yet some people think 100 years later we should fly in something that is only slightly more advanced than it.AirFrame wrote:Nobody understood why Orville and Wilbur wanted to do it either, but look where we ended up 100 years later...Big Pistons Forever wrote:I never did understand why people wanted to fly their lawn furniture.
Sort of part of the theme of the thread, hence why I hate them. Since you're right its growing, the problems are getting worse.As long as they are not endangering lives, creating a hazard to aircraft operations, and not permitting passengers,
Keep in mind that my POV comes from long and continued contact with the ultralight side of aviation. I still deal with this side of things on a daily basis. Its too bad it is the way it is, because it doesn't have to be that way. I could see the appeal if the primary concern of most in the group was neat designs and an specific freedom of flying, but sadly that isn't the case. I've never dealt with an ultralight guy who I came away from it thinking "Wow, that guy is going to fly safely and conscientiously" rather its always "Wow, that guy is going to kill himself" or "I'm surprised that guy hasn't killed himself." There might be exceptions, but it would only be the rare few that would prove the rule.I know most of you guys mean well but you come off as sounding really arrogant in some of your posts, not unlike the way some airline pilots, whose GA days are behind them, talk about the Wichita tin.
Shiny Side Up wrote:I've never dealt with an ultralight guy who I came away from it thinking "Wow, that guy is going to fly safely and conscientiously" rather its always "Wow, that guy is going to kill himself" or "I'm surprised that guy hasn't killed himself." There might be exceptions, but it would only be the rare few that would prove the rule.I know most of you guys mean well but you come off as sounding really arrogant in some of your posts, not unlike the way some airline pilots, whose GA days are behind them, talk about the Wichita tin.
That unfortunately is unlikely to change anytime soon and so the cycled of incompetence set by an absurdly low bar for achieving the UL pilot license, will sadly continue to make the good UL pilots very much the exception.B52 wrote:
The bottom line is, the training guidelines and or experience and or training for UL instructing are at present
woefully inadequate.
They do crash in great numbers, you just don't hear about it. In most cases they don't get off the ground, everyone walks away, and everyone thinks its cool. I don't know any ultralight guy who hasn't had some sort of incident, and I know way to many who have been hurt (but often out of sight, so oddly nothing is done - well almost, I know one fellow who's wife divorced him because he had too many near death incidents - but TC turns a blind eye to it) Engine failures are common - and one of the attitudes that prevails, is this is pretty much a right of passage to be an ultralight flyer. Fires are common. Control rigging issues are common. If you speak with an ultralight guy if he hasn't had one, he knows someone who has.B52 wrote: I can understand how and why SSU has his opinion, and while it's accurate a large amount of the time,
it is not accurate in all cases. If SSU was correct, UL's would be crashing at far greater numbers.
Including a first degree of separation casts a pretty big net. At that level I'm connected to some top names in Hollywood and sports, but those worlds have little to do with mine. That's nitpicking though since I agree with you otherwise. I don't even fly ULs and I know some who've had problems.Shiny Side Up wrote: ... If you speak with an ultralight guy if he hasn't had one, he knows someone who has.
I should have been more specific, that was referring to the control rigging issue. But even with the degree of separation, contrast it to regarding the same issue with certified airplanes, and the mis rigged controls is almost of mythical proportions - the only ones I know of are the few that have shown up in the same accident report that is often a part of the CPL ground school material. I don't know anyone, or even have a first degree of separation from anyone that has ever happened to, and I know a lot of pilots. On the other hand I know (no degree of separation) of at least six ultralight fliers that have crashed due to the problem (and all of them have gotten airborne before realising the problem - a short coming in their training perhaps?) and even was asked to fly an ultralight once where the problem was discovered.New_PIC wrote:Including a first degree of separation casts a pretty big net.
That's debateable, these guys aren't random loners after all. But what's worse I find is that those hazardous attitudes that pervade the ultralight community often sucker in the unsuspecting. I get a fair amount of business from the occasional fellow who realises (that is to say scared the shit out of himself) that there might be more to flying than what's there. Some want "just enough" training to make themselves safe, others become converts to which I'm glad.So what? No one is else is being harmed.
Shiny, it's a thousand bucks and a tail dragger. Are you in? I'll finance it.culver10 wrote:Check out this EBay ad, I do not think it is joke?? Make sure you zoom in on the fine sheet metal work!! http://www.ebay.com/itm/ULTRA-LIGHT-WIT ... ft&afsrc=1
In 2007, 24-year-old Nigerian physics student Mubarak Muhammed Abdullahi spent nearly a year building a 12-metre (39ft) long helicopter out of spare parts sourced from old cars, motorcycles, and even a crashed Boeing 747, using money he saved from repairing cell phones and computers.
“When I was a kid I loved helicopters,” says Abdullahi. “Whenever I saw one in the movies, I used to ask ‘how does this thing work?”
Years later when he told his college friends of his plan to build one, they laughed. “Only whites can build things like that,” they said. His response was to build a bright yellow helicopter with push-button ignition, an accelerator lever and a joystick for thrust and bearing. It was powered by a 133-horsepower engine salvaged from a Honda Civic.
Unlike the flying machines of many other amateur aviation innovators, Abdullahi’s contraption actually flew, although never above a height of 2.1 metres (7ft). But it did earn him international recognition, a TED Global Fellowship and a scholarship to study aircraft maintenance in the UK.