Rutan's New Design...

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Cave Canem

Rutan's New Design...

#1 Post by Cave Canem » Thu Nov 26, 2015 5:42 am

It seems that Burt Rutan, having "retired" from the hurly burly of Scaled Composites and the ongoing travails of helping Branson et el morph his Ansari prize winning SpaceShip One into a viable 'catapult' for flinging so-called celebrities into low earth orbit, has bounced back with yet another radically different and interesting light aircraft design. As they say "you 'canard' put a good man down" as Rutan has often proved!

Burt Rutan's SkiGull successfully took to the skies this week from the Coeur d'Alene Airport. The unusual airplane, which is designed to take off and land from water, snow and land, flew for 1.8 hours with test pilot Glenn Smith at the controls.

The test flight included basic stability and control tests in the cruise and landing configurations, the latter of which with flaps and skis extended. Speeds were limited to 80 knots and the SkiGull remained below 8,000 feet. Smith reported that the airplane flew straight with his hands off the controls. He also reported the speed and maneuvering stability as excellent. Lowering the skis and flaps resulted in no trim change and the stall speed appeared slower than that of the Piper Cub chase plane, Rutan said. However, he described this early evaluation of the airplane's stall characteristics as unacceptable, with no buffet and a roll drop-off to the right.

The flight was conducted mostly at low power settings and the Rotax 912iS burned less than three gallons during the flight, Rutan said.

SkiGull's first flight was conducted just a couple of weeks after we reported that water testing had started at Hayden Lake north of Coeur d’Alene, Idaho. Rutan rejoiced after the flight, stating that it happened "just in time, since we got our first North Idaho snow just hours after the flight."

Rutan built the SkiGull in his garage, a 20-month project that he described as "grueling." He said he will never again get involved in the process of composite construction and finishing, though he will continue to design airplanes.

Read more at http://www.flyingmag.com/news/burt-rutans-skigull-takes-skies#XDtMKtsRQwwPecud.99

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Re: Rutan's New Design...

#2 Post by stuart » Thu Nov 26, 2015 5:16 pm

Another pic here, the wheels look tiny.

thumb_wrd9wwih5hnkzfv9bdrb_1024.jpg
thumb_wrd9wwih5hnkzfv9bdrb_1024.jpg (127.22 KiB) Viewed 695 times
it's good to be bad.

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Re: Rutan's New Design...

#3 Post by Stoneboat » Fri Nov 27, 2015 2:12 am

...take off and land from water, snow and land...


But not gravel by the look of the gear. Interesting design though.

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Re: Rutan's New Design...

#4 Post by Cave Canem » Sat Nov 28, 2015 9:51 am

Stoneboat wrote:
...take off and land from water, snow and land...


But not gravel by the look of the gear. Interesting design though.


Agree, Rutan has the ability to make some of the most interesting and sometimes the most impractically fun aircraft to fly... having had the pleasure of flying his Varieze canard.

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Re: Rutan's New Design...

#5 Post by glad rag » Sat Nov 28, 2015 6:51 pm

Is there a listing of his creations anywhere~?
The sands of time are running low...

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Re: Rutan's New Design...

#6 Post by dubbleyew eight » Mon Nov 30, 2015 12:39 am

looking at that second photo. what was the man thinking?
the pair of front wheels look to be homebuilder's tailwheels, the rear ones ??
and you are going to land that at 50mph. ....with the occasional crosswind gust. 8-| 8-| 8-|
glad its him and not me.

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Re: Rutan's New Design...

#7 Post by Cave Canem » Mon Nov 30, 2015 6:37 am

glad rag wrote:Is there a listing of his creations anywhere~?


Not completely comprehensive...

http://www.flyingmag.com/photo-gallery/photos/awesome-airplanes-burt-rutan?pnid=21174

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Re: Rutan's New Design...

#8 Post by glad rag » Tue Dec 01, 2015 2:51 pm

TY
The sands of time are running low...

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Re: Rutan's New Design...

#9 Post by Cave Canem » Thu Dec 03, 2015 4:14 pm

Interesting for those that might like Rutan's stuff... seems like the ski idea will need to be rethought and strakes or something else tried to rectify poor stall characteristics but all in all a good start...

Legendary aircraft (and spaceship) designer Burt Rutan was in a celebratory mood Nov. 24, dispatching an email to friends that had been a long time coming: the first flight of SkiGull, the forty-seventh aircraft designed and built by Rutan or one of his companies, completed a successful maiden flight in Idaho Nov. 23.

Rutan was in a Piper Super Cub flown by Mike Kincaid, a former Alaska state trooper and movie pilot, who was forced to make many turns to avoid overtaking Rutan’s latest creation as test pilot Glenn Smith put SkiGull through its paces. The new Rutan airplane is an amphibious piston single with wing-mounted engine and retractable skis that are also fitted with small wheels, an arrangement that enables it to handle hard surfaces and rough water with equal ease.

At least they will, once Rutan does a little tweaking. The right ski delaminated near the site of a previous repair on landing, and, “It is clear that I will have to make new, autoclaved skis,” Rutan wrote, noting Smith “was able to taxi clear of the active runway on one good ski and one soft ski.”

Smith began the 1.8-hour test with an option: the first item on the test card was to take off for a very short hop just above the runway, though with the option to proceed with the flight if the pilot felt comfortable doing so. Smith felt confident in the airplane after liftoff, and proceeded with additional maneuvers, staying close to Coeur D'Alene-Pappy Boyington Field. The Super Cub had to do S-turns to avoid overtaking the SkiGull while Smith explored its low-speed handling characteristics. An “aggressive” flight test plan included basic stability and control tests in various configurations. Smith knocked out every item on the card before returning to land, verifying that handling and maneuverability were as good as Rutan expected.

Working within 80-knot speed and 8,000-foot altitude limits, Smith did discover a flaw: the natural-laminar-flow wing gave no warning buffet ahead of the stall, the first indication being a roll drop-off to the right. Rutan, watching from a greater distance than hoped, was unable to get a good look at tufts placed along the wing that would visually indicate airflow and help him fine tune the design.

“We did not get a look at the tufts since the (SkiGull) stalled slower than the Super Cub chase, so we do not know what part of the wing caused the roll-off,” Rutan wrote. “This will require addition of the typical add-ons, like stall strips, vortilons or a leading edge cuff.”

More than a dozen people, including Rutan’s wife and future SkiGull passenger, Tonya, were on hand for the test, which wrapped up just ahead of the first North Idaho snow of the year. Rutan has a punchlist to work through this winter, though he’ll be doing some traveling, also, one presumes: he’s scheduled to accept the National Aeronautic Association 2015 Wright Brothers Memorial Trophy at the Aero Club of Washington Dec. 11, the latest honor in a storied career.

Rutan noted in his email that he has no plans to build another aircraft, though he does plan to continue creating new designs. It will be up to somebody else to build them, however: Rutan has been working on SkiGull for 20 months in his garage, and notes “it was a grueling exercise for an old guy.”

“While I will finish the modifications and testing needed to find if SkiGull can reach the goal of being able to handle rough water, ocean swells, beaching on ocean coasts and operating from snowfields, I will not again expose myself of the challenge of laying up sticky composites, sanding foam and carbon fiber, staying up at night to monitor oven cures, etc.” Rutan wrote. “I plan to enjoy this new airplane in retirement, including its unique capabilities that combine STOL from all surfaces with ocean crossing range. It has a huge baggage compartment, so Tonya and I might even load it up for golf trips (I had quit golf 2 years ago to build SkiGull).”


http://www.aopa.org/News-and-Video/All-News/2015/November/30/Rutan-SkiGull-makes-maiden-flight

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Re: Rutan's New Design...

#10 Post by Lone Ranger » Fri Dec 04, 2015 9:32 am

Interesting (given Burt's propensity for unusual layouts), that he has gone back to a configuration that has been standard for single engined flying boats since the 30's
He has of course given it some innovative tweeks.

I suppose with his money the skids could be considered wear items and if considered such, I reckon you could use them on about any surface, if its too rough or irregular for the wheels, they basicly become redundant and it rides on the skids, also the wheels being so small, I doubt even loosing them all on one side would cause a ground loop
Oh Blimey

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