I was at that air show this last summer, just live down the road from there. Do you have any idea his price?
Gil
I was at that air show this last summer, just live down the road from there. Do you have any idea his price?
Gil
I'm 6'1" and 185 lbs and fit in my model 4 just great if that helps. In fact, I own two other aircraft with much larger cabins but actually prefer the nice snug fit (in a good way) of my Kitfox 4. It feels more like you put it on, rather than just crawling into it...
The 4 model I'm buying says it has long wings with speed tips. Can anyone explain to me just what that means? Any idea what the cruise would be with a 582?
Thanks
Gil
I've never heard of "speed" tips, but would suspect they are the Hoerner style as opposed to the droop tips. I have these tips on my plane (see photo albums).
Properly rigged you should see at least 85 mph out of that setup.
The droop tips are Hoerner tips. Speed tips are normal rounded tips. The rounded tips make it easier to see beyond the wing tip. With the Hoerner tips your view straight out of the cabin past the wingtips is restricted. However, they are supposed to help with STOL performance
Ralph
Hoerner tips are not droop tips. Look in the Kitfox optional accessories catalog to see the Hoerner tips.
Jim Ott
Portland, OR
Kitfox SS7 flying
Rotax 912ULS
I think you meant to say "Speedster" tips, which are the Hoerner style tips they first put on the Kitfox Speedster to help reduce wingtip drag. They are less draggy than the older droop tips used on all previous Kitfoxes. I really like them on my 4.
I once test flew a model 4 1050 with a 582 and a warp drive 3 blade prop on a big set of Full lotus floats with a large incidence angle on the float rigging (meaning, in flight the bows of the floats were way down when the fuselage was flying level, in other words, huge drag...) and it would cruise at a real 90 mph without trying too hard.
So I personally think a 582 model 4 on wheels should be able to do 100+ with some minimal efforts to keep it light and clean up the most logical drag areas (wing struts, jury struts, tail fairings, etc., etc.)
That will be a fun airplane.