Well guys, I'm going to sign off from this forum. It is nice but I'm  
not sure this is the place for me.


On Mar 28, 2010, at 11:49 AM, Dj Merrill wrote:

> On 3/28/2010 8:50 AM, Randy Smith wrote:
>> And I bet it made him feel good too.  Answer 1 question why put a  
>> nosegear on it?
>
>       Easier, safer, cheaper insurance, and increased sale opportunities
> (there are more younger standard tricycle gear pilots than there are
> taildragger pilots these days, which is who would be buying it if you
> had to sell it).
>
>       The only downside I can see to a tricycle gear setup is a very slight
> decrease in the top end speed (maybe 5 kts?).
>
>       Overall, the pros of the tricycle gear setup outweigh the cons.  I
> think most people go with a taildragger simply because they want  
> to, not
> because it makes any sense to do so.  Nothing wrong with that, as  
> it is
> one of the reasons why we are involved in experimental aviation.
>
>       The simple fact is, you only spend a very small fraction of each  
> flight
> on the ground, which is where there is any real substantial difference
> between a tricycle and a taildragger.  Once you are in the air,  
> there is
> effectively no difference between the two.
>
>       If only a small fraction of the time it makes any difference (when in
> the flare and on the ground), from my perspective, why wouldn't you  
> want
> to have the safest KR that you can, which implies tricycle gear?
>
> -Dj
>
> -- 
> Dj Merrill - N1JOV
> Glastar Sportsman 2+2 Builder #7118 N421DJ - http://deej.net/ 
> sportsman/
> Grumman Yankee Driver N9870L - http://deej.net/yankee/
>
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