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a Polish 601

 
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larry(at)macsmachine.com
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PostPosted: Fri May 25, 2007 5:21 pm    Post subject: a Polish 601 Reply with quote

Hi Guys,

This week was mostly bicycle work, finishing travel stops and some tow
bars, but flying would have been seriously compromised by very windy
days. I ate lunch with the guys at the Hy-Vee and continued to add to
the instructional and pictures of the recumbent. It’s getting close to
the end, save the molded fiberglass seat. Friday, Cy called to say a 601
was being assembled at Moline #1 hangar having been imported from a
Polish manufacturer, so I drove the Corvette out to see it. It could
have been called a knock-off of a 601XL but the workmanship and the
engineering were taken considerably further than one might have
expected. A Polish mechanic was hanging the dry sump Rotax 912 engine
when I got there and within an hour, I helped hang the wings on it. A
nice plane to be sure and it should be for the nearly $100K it cost the
buyer. Lots of fiberglass fairing work and a nice split-flap design with
short ailerons at the ends of the wing. A totally IFR instrument panel
was completely fitted and the mechanical approach for dual sticks was
done with serious engineering talent using proper soft stops and
construction that Zenith might well envy. There’s a lot said about good
engineering and this one was very complete aircraft down to an entire
structure of bucked rivets. There were diagonal pieces at every frame in
the fuselage. The heat muff wrapped around the exhaust muffler as a
separate stainless entity that could only be compromised by CO2 if both
containers were pierced. The firewall was stainless and the fuel lines
were also special stainless tube and the battery sat in its own nicely
made stainless box. Nose steering was differential braking, which I
would not care for, but the two-piece spring steel tapered main landing
gear were very small and nicely integrated into the bottom side of the
center spar structure. Even a tow bar was latched in the rear baggage
compartment and there was a tailskid for the possibility of contact. The
canopy acrylic was quite different by its slightly pail pink UV
protective color, and though it still tilts forward, there was a sliding
air door on each side of the canopy for flying or taxiing. The
overhanging edges of the instrument panel took ducted air pressure to 4
small adjustable air vents for good circulation in an otherwise
hot-bubble environment. The upholstery was nice, but the steep angled
side padding and narrow center panels suggested that people with wide
bottoms would never become really comfortable where it counts.

It’s going to be a nice plane, but I don’t think it will really ever be
called a 601, though the initial similarity was remarkable. Perhaps it
was the fire engine red and white paint job. I can't wait to see it fly.
Stay safe,,,,,,,,

Larry McFarland 601HDS at www.macsmachine.com


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planecrazydld(at)yahoo.co
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PostPosted: Sat May 26, 2007 5:52 am    Post subject: a Polish 601 Reply with quote

Hi Larry;

Is there any data available on teh web for that specific plane?

Thanks.

do not archive

LarryMcFarland <larry(at)macsmachine.com> wrote:[quote] --> Zenith-List message posted by: LarryMcFarland

Hi Guys,

This week was mostly bicycle work, finishing travel stops and some tow
bars, but flying would have been seriously compromised by very windy
days. I ate lunch with the guys at the Hy-Vee and continued to add to
the instructional and pictures of the recumbent. It’s getting close to
the end, save the molded fiberglass seat. Friday, Cy called to say a 601
was being assembled at Moline #1 hangar having been imported from a
Polish manufacturer, so I drove the Corvette out to see it. It could
have been called a knock-off of a 601XL but the workmanship and the
engineering were taken considerably further than one might have
expected. A Polish mechanic was hanging the dry sump Rotax 912 engine
when I got there and within an hour, I helped hang the wings on it. A
nice plane to be sure and it should be for the nearly $100K it cost the
buyer. Lots of fiberglass fairing work and a nice split-flap design with
short ailerons at the ends of the wing. A totally IFR instrument panel
was completely fitted and the mechanical approach for dual sticks was
done with serious engineering talent using proper soft stops and
construction that Zenith might well envy. There’s a lot said about good
engineering and this one was very complete aircraft down to an entire
structure of bucked rivets. There were diagonal pieces at every frame in
the fuselage. The heat muff wrapped around the exhaust muffler as a
separate stainless entity that could only be compromised by CO2 if both
containers were pierced. The firewall was stainless and the fuel lines
were also special stainless tube and the battery sat in its own nicely
made stainless box. Nose steering was differential braking, which I
would not care for, but the two-piece spring steel tapered main landing
gear were very small and nicely integrated into the bottom side of the
center spar structure. Even a tow bar was latched in the rear baggage
compartment and there was a tailskid for the possibility of contact. The
canopy acrylic was quite different by its slightly pail pink UV
protective color, and though it still tilts forward, there was a sliding
air door on each side of the canopy for flying or taxiing. The
overhanging edges of the instrument panel took ducted air pressure to 4
small adjustable air vents for good circulation in an otherwise
hot-bubble environment. The upholstery was nice, but the steep angled
side padding and narrow center panels suggested [quote][b]


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engineerguy3737(at)yahoo.
Guest





PostPosted: Sat May 26, 2007 6:56 am    Post subject: a Polish 601 Reply with quote

Does mine qualify as Polish? Smile

Dan Lykowski
Dynon Avionics
601xl

DO NOT ARCHIVE

---


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larry(at)macsmachine.com
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PostPosted: Sat May 26, 2007 7:25 am    Post subject: a Polish 601 Reply with quote

Hi David,
The aircraft had the name AERO Sp and it was serial number 25 of this run.
It had been flight tested and issued Airworthiness Certificate in
Poland. The wings still
had the letters issued for European registration painted on the bottom.
Then it was taken
apart and crated to Moline, IL for reassembly. It might take a while to
get data specific on
this plane, but I'm sure it's out there. I'll try to build a temp page
for pictures taken on my site.
Might be a couple of days.

Larry McFarland at www.macsmachine.com
do not archive

David Downey wrote:
Quote:
Hi Larry;

Is there any data available on teh web for that specific plane?

Thanks.

do not archive

*/LarryMcFarland <larry(at)macsmachine.com>/* wrote:



Hi Guys,

This week was mostly bicycle work, finishing travel stops and some
tow
bars, but flying would have been seriously compromised by very windy
days. I ate lunch with the guys at the Hy-Vee and continued to add to
the instructional and pictures of the recumbent. It’s getting
close to
the end, save the molded fiberglass seat. Friday, Cy called to say
a 601
was being assembled at Moline #1 hangar having been imported from a
Polish manufacturer, so I drove the Corvette out to see it. It could
have been called a knock-off of a 601XL but the workmanship and the
engineering were taken considerably further than one might have
expected.



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dgardea(at)gmail.com



Joined: 26 Mar 2007
Posts: 50
Location: Indianapolis, IN

PostPosted: Sat May 26, 2007 7:55 am    Post subject: Re: a Polish 601 Reply with quote

I googled Aero in Poland and came up with their site:
http://www.at-3.com/en/company

Larry, not sure if this is the plane you saw but the pic on their home page has a 601XL looking aircraft. Talk about a quick build kit .. look how they pack it into that container.


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_________________
Dave Gardea
CH650 - Corvair - flying!
http://n631dg.t15.org/home.html
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larry(at)macsmachine.com
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PostPosted: Sat May 26, 2007 1:56 pm    Post subject: a Polish 601 Reply with quote

Dave,
The aircraft is the AT-3 and it's exceedingly well done. There were
several things on it that one tends to learn from
and look back saying I could have solved it this way too. The wood in
the crating I saw was clear, straight grained and
no knots to 18 feet and I would have liked to have taken it home.

Larry McFarland
do not archive

dgardea(at)gmail.com wrote:
Quote:


I googled Aero in Poland and came up with their site:
http://www.at-3.com/en/company

Larry, not sure if this is the plane you saw but the pic on their home page has a 601XL looking aircraft. Talk about a quick build kit .. look how they pack it into that container.

--------
Dave Gardea
601XL - Corvair
working on wings




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PatrickW



Joined: 27 Oct 2006
Posts: 380
Location: Fort Worth, Texas

PostPosted: Thu May 29, 2008 8:17 pm    Post subject: Re: a Polish 601 Reply with quote

Interesting...

I wonder how many outfits in Poland are building 601's.


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