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On Fri, 25 Feb 2005 20:05:44 GMT, ET wrote:
But hey, if Quicksilver decides not to put together Consensus standards SLSA's well, there is your opportunity eh? You can do a little paperwork, assemble them, sell them as SLSA's with Quicksilver as your materials supplier and life goes on. Well...I wouldn't use the term "a little paperwork." While you no longer have to submit the data to the FAA for approval, you are still required to perform a good amount of structural analysis and testing. This data is supposed to be on-file at your factory; if the FAA does a spot check and you don't have it, they'll pull the airworthiness certificates for every plane you've ever sold. You'd have to reverse-engineer the Quicksilver. Also, as part of the certification process, you have to generate a manufacturing plan with quality control, publish full maintenance manuals, and establish a system to monitor the fleet's airworthiness. The program is designed for small companies, but not one- or two-man operations. My feel is that as the deadline nears, there are probably going to be companies that produce minimalist LSAs for ultralight training. The simpler the aircraft is, the less the amount of paperwork. Ron Wanttaja |
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