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parahawk
Joined: 10 Jul 2006 Posts: 21 Location: Washington State
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Posted: Fri Sep 15, 2006 8:57 pm Post subject: Kitfox IV-1200 BRS mount |
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Can anyone help me with info about the best location to mount the 1350 softpack BRS and what modifactions have to be done to the plexiglass above the rocket.
Or is there a way to install it outside on top ??
I am looking for ideas.
Thanks a lot
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smokey_bear_40220(at)yaho Guest
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Posted: Fri Sep 15, 2006 9:38 pm Post subject: Kitfox IV-1200 BRS mount |
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When I looked into installing one, the proceedure was
to have it fire out thru the side of the fuselage just
behind the baggage compartment. This is so if you
have a wing fold over the top, the rocket isn't
blocked.
This installation has to be done before covering
though. The rocket has no problem shooting thru the
fabric, but the chute lines are run up and over the
right side top structure right under the turtledeck.
When the rocket fires, the chute is pulled out thru
the side and the lines rip the fabric up to this
point. Then the turtledeck is ripped lose and the
overhead canopy is torn off too. The shroud lines are
connected to the four corners of the cockpit to wing
structure, so it will hang relatively level from
there.
You will have some damage from its use, but a lot less
than without it.
The alternative is the somewhat aerodynamic hard pack
mounted on top of the cabin, but it sounds like you
already have the soft pack.
A velcroed door built into the turtledeck for the
rocket and parachute to shoot up thru is another
choice. The turtledeck and top canopy are still going
to be torn up a bit though, depending on where you run
the lines to the wing/fuse hard points.
It has been 6 years since I looked into this. Maybe
BRS has some new methods?
Kurt S.
--- parahawk <alfi98596(at)yahoo.com> wrote:
Quote: | Can anyone help me with info about the best location
to mount the 1350 softpack BRS and what modifactions
have to be done to the plexiglass above the rocket.
Or is there a way to install it outside on top ??
I am looking for ideas.
Thanks a lot
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dan(at)azshowersolutions. Guest
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Posted: Sat Sep 16, 2006 3:17 am Post subject: Kitfox IV-1200 BRS mount |
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Attached are some diagrams that BRS sent me when I was looking into a chute. These however aren't for a soft pak (canister), but they will show how the chords are mounted. I would think BRS would have the same info for a soft pak...jsut ask em.
Dan, Mesa
KF-IV 912-s / building
kurt schrader <smokey_bear_40220(at)yahoo.com> wrote:
[quote]--> Kitfox-List message posted by: kurt schrader
When I looked into installing one, the proceedure was
to have it fire out thru the side of the fuselage just
behind the baggage compartment. This is so if you
have a wing fold over the top, the rocket isn't
blocked.
This installation has to be done before covering
though. The rocket has no problem shooting thru the
fabric, but the chute lines are run up and over the
right side top structure right under the turtledeck.
When the rocket fires, the chute is pulled out thru
the side and the lines rip the fabric up to this
point. Then the turtledeck is ripped lose and the
overhead canopy is torn off too. The shroud lines are
connected to the four corners of the cockpit to wing
structure, so it will hang relatively level from
there.
You will have some damage from its use, but a lot less
than without it.
The alternative is the somewhat aerodynamic hard pack
mounted on top of the cabin, but it sounds like you
already have the soft pack.
A velcroed door built into the turtledeck for the
rocket and parachute to shoot up thru is another
choice. The turtledeck and top canopy are still going
to be torn up a bit though, depending on where you run
the lines to the wing/fuse hard points.
It has been 6 years since I looked into this. Maybe
BRS has some new methods?
Kurt
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3575__Kitfox_III_Canister_Install_PG_1.pdf |
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3575__Kitfox_III_Canister_Install_PG_2.pdf |
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3575__Kitfox_III_Harness_Install.pdf |
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115.27 KB |
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parahawk
Joined: 10 Jul 2006 Posts: 21 Location: Washington State
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Posted: Sat Sep 16, 2006 5:19 pm Post subject: Re: Kitfox IV-1200 BRS mount |
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I have not got the BRS yet and my plane is built. BRS tells me they only suitable chute is the 1350 softpack mounted inside in the baggage area. they sent a drawing similar to yours but it has the Bridle routed through the fabric to the outside and around the fuselage and covered with a double sided tape to hold it agains the fuselage. Seems to me me kind of an unusual procedure, but I really don't know and probably have to go with their suggestion.
Thanks\
Al
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kirkhull(at)sbcglobal.net Guest
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Posted: Sun Sep 17, 2006 4:31 am Post subject: Kitfox IV-1200 BRS mount |
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I would not even buy a BRS unless you are flying over very nasty areas. The
kitfox can land just about anywhere if you just maintain control and fly the
airplane. With the BRS , once you pull the handle you go down a little
slower but you have no control over where you go down.
--
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dave(at)cfisher.com Guest
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Posted: Sun Sep 17, 2006 4:44 am Post subject: Kitfox IV-1200 BRS mount |
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So true,
My motta is if the aeroplane needa parachute -- I will not be in it.
Dave
PS If any Kitfoxes in SW Ontario a few are going to Reeces Corners for
breakfast soon . Last minute deal here
Reeces Corner is a grass strip just east of Sarnia Port Huron and in CFS
we 1/8 mile vis now but should lift in next hour or so.
---
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Michel
Joined: 10 Jan 2006 Posts: 966 Location: Norway
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Posted: Sun Sep 17, 2006 5:37 am Post subject: Kitfox IV-1200 BRS mount |
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On Sep 17, 2006, at 2:30 PM, kirkhull wrote:
Quote: | I would not even buy a BRS unless you are flying over very nasty areas.
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I tend to agree with you and Dave, Kirk.
I won't argue against BRS ballistic chute, safety is something
personal. Have one if it gives you peace of mind. But I don't want one
because I am afraid to use it ... when I don't really need it. Once
deployed, the chute takes you wherever the wind blows. You are no
longer a pilot, merely a passenger taken by the wind.
Which condition would call for the chute? Loosing a wing? I don't think
any Kitfox has ever done that and when it happened at my airfield, to a
Jora ultralight, the pilot, in the mad spin, didn't manage to release
the chute.
Of course, ballistic chute manufacturers will show you many cases of
accidents where life was saved by their product. ... or was it? How do
you know the end of an event that didn't happen?
In any case, my philosophy is to fly as the European utralight rule
obliges us to: Always with a possible landing site in sight. Apart from
loosing entirely a wing, I can't think of what could happen to my
Kitfox, that would require a chute. I can climb or descend on the
throttle only. I can turn with only the flaperon or the rudder. What
else could happen? Please correct me if I miss something.
I think my, and my eventual passenger's safety, is better served by
frequent training like dead-stick landings and manoeuvring without one
control surface. I have never landed without touching the elevator,
though. But I know I could make a non-fatal landing without it.
Ballistic chutes are like survival rafts at sea. When it gets pretty
nasty, one thinks: "I wanna go home and pronto!" But the safest way
home is not always the shortest one.
Cheers,
Michel
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kirkhull(at)sbcglobal.net Guest
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Posted: Sun Sep 17, 2006 7:18 am Post subject: Kitfox IV-1200 BRS mount |
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There are other reasons for a BRS but they just don't happen enough to worry
about. I don't know the exact #s but I don't believe the Brs brings you
down much slower then the stall speed of a fox. There have been some cases
where the BRS was deployed when all the pilot needed to do was Switch tanks
or pull carb heat. The end result was a destroyed aircraft ( even with a
BRS the plane will be substantially damaged on landing even if you land in
an open field)
--
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rliebmann(at)comcast.net Guest
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Posted: Sun Sep 17, 2006 7:34 am Post subject: Kitfox IV-1200 BRS mount |
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I agree with Michel's quote: "Once you deploy the chute you are no longer
in control of the plane." The reason I put the BRS in my plane is
because I fly in a high traffic area with students all around. If I were to
have a mid-air without the chute I'm a gonner. But the NTSB says that it is
usually not the mid-air that kills you, its the crash at the end of the
fall.
The chute gives me much peace of mind.
Ron N55KF
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smokey_bear_40220(at)yaho Guest
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Posted: Sun Sep 17, 2006 8:26 am Post subject: Kitfox IV-1200 BRS mount |
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I thought seriously about getting one for my plane
because I intend to fly over rough terrain and at
higher altitude where stall speed will be much higher
ground speed. It would give peace of mind when there
is no place to land.
I think if you have an operating engine and rudder,
you can steer it a little like a decending blimp and
pick a better spot, if close and you have time. That
means the cause for using it is not the engine/prop.
I understand it will give a 20 mph verticle hit to the
plane. That is about 30 feet per second vs 5 feet per
second max for a "normal" landing.
For consideration:
When checking the accident records for all Fox's, back
around 2000, there were none that would have been
saved by a BRS. The highest failure points were
stalls on takeoff at about 300 feet. Not enough time
to deploy.
Second, my chute was 39 lbs.
Third, and the clincher was that there were no rockets
available for my chute when I wanted one due to the
NTSB restrictions after the Florida crash.
So I don't have one, but may add one later if the
mental work calls for it when I move to the Rockies.
As Michel said, it becomes a personal safety decision
in the end.
Kurt S.
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dan(at)azshowersolutions. Guest
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Posted: Sun Sep 17, 2006 8:47 am Post subject: Kitfox IV-1200 BRS mount |
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All of these reasons are sound...whether you choose to install a BRS or not. I tend to agree with Ron, as I too fly in a highly concentrated area of student training. I have had one close encounter of the worst kind due to someone simply not following proceedure. You tend to remember those things and plan accordingly. If you are clipped and loose control, there's not one of us here that would mind having that rip chord behind you.
Dan, Mesa
314DW
Ron Liebmann <rliebmann(at)comcast.net> wrote:
[quote]--> Kitfox-List message posted by: "Ron Liebmann"
I agree with Michel's quote: "Once you deploy the chute you are no longer
in control of the plane." The reason I put the BRS in my plane is
because I fly in a high traffic area with students all around. If I were to
have a [quote][b]
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Michel
Joined: 10 Jan 2006 Posts: 966 Location: Norway
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Posted: Sun Sep 17, 2006 9:28 am Post subject: Kitfox IV-1200 BRS mount |
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On Sep 17, 2006, at 6:47 PM, Dan Billingsley wrote:
Quote: | I tend to agree with Ron, as I too fly in a highly concentrated area
of student training.
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That is, indeed, a good argument. Just like the inflatable raft is a
good thing in a yacht that burns down, in calm waters. But my personal
consideration is also the fear of using it in panic and not when really
needed. Like, what do I do if I find myself suddenly in IMC? Getting
out of it by pulling he cord is tempting, but maybe not wise when I
don't even see what's under me. Could I resist the temptation?
Just a thought.
Cheers,
Michel
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