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Old March 15th 08, 08:10 PM posted to rec.aviation.piloting,rec.aviation.homebuilt
Bertie the Bunyip[_25_]
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Default Airparks; Living On The Beaten Path?

William Hung wrote in
:

On Mar 15, 9:44*am, Bertie the Bunyip wrote:
"Peter Dohm" wrote
innews:F3HCj.19478$r76.5354@bi

gnews8.bellsouth.net:







"Bertie the Bunyip" wrote in message
.. .
"Peter Dohm" wrote in
:


"Highflyer" wrote in message
...


---------------snipped----------


The Tcart used to cruise at 100 in real life on a Continental
A-65.


I have flown several Coupes. *Have yet to see 110 mph in level
flight on any of them!


Sometimes specifications are accurate, and sometimes they
aren't!
:-)


Highflyer
Highflight Aviation Services
Pinckneyville Airport, PJY


At one time, I marvelled at how much more capable so many older
designs must have been--and then I learned that some of those old
factory specs were just as imaginative as some of the earliest
kits.


Actually, many of them were quite accurate. HF is right, the
T-cart would do close on 100 with an A-65 and so would a Luscombe.
The Monocoupe 90 was very quick and the 30s Cessnas delivered as
advertised as well. The aoirplanes that could be classified as
"pilots" airplanes tended to do waht they said in advertising
because if they didn;'t they would be found out pretty quickly.
The airplanes that were pitched more at newcomers probably
suffered more from exageration.


Bertie


Thanks for that. *Some of those old Cessna numbers really looked a
little too good--so I am expecially glad they were true.


I had previously confirmed that the T-carts were impressive
performers, but have never known anything about the Monocoupes.


Well, they won races time after time in the thirties. Nothing could
touch them. Johnny Livingston even flew one race inverted to spice
things up.With bigger engines and clipped wings they went even
faster. We're talking RV performance in the early thirties with
similar horsepower and farily hairy chested handling.. Since Don
*Luscombe was one of the designers you can see how the Luscombes were
race-bred.

Bertie- Hide quoted text -

- Show quoted text -


The Kitfox reminds me of the Coupe.


It's supposed to, the bump cowl and such. But it's nothing like it,
really. For one thing, the 'coupe wasn't built like lawn furniture.. And
a 'coupe with a two stroke? Shudder!


Bertie