SonexN76ET wrote:I am sure that if Sonex and BRS were to engineer a solution it would be a solution that would have the chute fire out of the turtle deck or the side and have risers that would be deflected away from the cockpit and the plane would float down rightside up.
SonexN76ET wrote:Let's say that you take your mother or your daughter or your grandpa for a ride and some unforseen event arrises. Say for instance a UAV operated by some chump 400 miles away in an air conditioned bunker hits you from behind and your aircraft becomes uncontrollable. If you have a BRS, you pull the handle and enjoy the ride. Without it, you have no options.
kmwoody wrote:Does anyone have an idea of what happens to the canopy when you open it in flight. I would hope that it would rip off the fuselage, but I can't help think that if it didn't it would continue to flop back and forth pounding me whilst I am trying to exit the aircraft. I guess a few bruises and broken bones are much better than the other option in an uncontrollable aircraft.
Ken W
Sonex 959
SonexN76ET wrote:Noel,
I am going to politely disagree with you on all of your points. Most significantly, I do not think you can expect a non pilot to exit a tumbling aircraft and pull a D ring on their own.
Plus on the Cirrus ditching video, imagine trying to land in those swells, cartwheeling, and then trying to get out of an inverted sinking aircraft. I'll take the BRS chute thank you.
Everyone is entitled to their opinion. I think BRS chutes are a wonderful safety feature. I personally know one pilot who had is life and his passenger's lives saved by a BRS chute. He is a true believer.
Jake
Jake
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