>From the book "Test Flying Your Homebuilt" by Vaughn
Askew[sp].  He suggests putting your parachute and helmet on and sitting in a 
mock up of the cockpit.

What I did was use cardboard to cut bulkhead templates
and wear a bike helmet and sit on a cushon.  Then I marked where the canopy top 
was, and worked from there.
>From cardboard, I made panelboard bulkheads, and
eventually one or two plywood bulkheads.  I also sat
in the cockput and taped cardboard to the firewall to
simulate a cowling, and figured out how high I wanted
my instrument panel.  

The aft bulkheads were clamped in place with "C" clamps
and I foamed up my entire aft deck until I liked what I
had... then I glassed it.

Thats how I did it... your mileage may vary.

-- Ross (N541RY -- not yet flying)
----- Original Message -----
From: "William Clapp" <clapps...@cybersouth.com>
List-Post: krnet@list.krnet.org
Date: Sun, 10 Aug 2003 19:06:38 -0400
To: "KR builders and pilots" <kr...@mylist.net>
Subject: KR>Canopy and turtledeck

> I am getting ready to build form for my turtledeck but am interested is 
> knowing a couple things.       
> First.  I am 5' 8" tall.  How high is the average turtledeck for someone my 
> heigth?  How to test.  I have a Todd's Canopy - very flexible and oversized 
> so trimming is no problem. - a liitle rounder than a dragonfly.    
> 
> Second - Can I move the seat support crossmember cack a couple inches to 
> provide 1) more headroom and 2) a more comfy seat that I can adjust with 
> removable back cushions or adjustable back?
> _______________________________________________
> see KRnet list details at http://www.krnet.org/instructions.html

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