lutorm wrote:Just so we're clear: I'm not at all against experimentation. (The 3D-printed Aerovee intake should make that clear! :-)
But there are facts and there are judgement calls. These are facts:If you disagree with any of those two statements, you're deluding yourself.
- Exceeding the design limits does eat into the safety margin.
- Absence of previous failures is not evidence that there will be no such failures.
Now, these are judgement calls:Everyone's answers to those will be different, and they will determine how that individual proceeds. But in order to make those judgement calls, you gotta have some data to work with.
- What remaining safety margin am I comfortable with?
- How many instances of existing modifications, that have not failed, do I need to be comfortable with it?
If people have actually done their own calculations to conclude that they're comfortable with the extra weight, please post it for everyone's benefit.
rizzz wrote:So are we really eating into the safety margin if we don't allow aerobatics?
It might be as you say "a judgement call".
Direct C51 wrote:Maybe a 200 lb artificial limit was placed to ensure the market did not have to be shared with the other auto conversion? Maybe not.
lutorm wrote:rizzz wrote:So are we really eating into the safety margin if we don't allow aerobatics?
It might be as you say "a judgement call".
Sure you are. Then you're getting some back by imposing more strict operating limitations. :-)
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