Bryan Cotton wrote:Tony,
Interesting thoughts! I'm not sure the alignment pin is the culprit. And even with a good alignment pin, if the latch is not locked to the frame, it can move and allow a release. I think if I forgot my locking pin the spring would still hold it. And if my alignment pin failed, my canopy could only move back a little before it hit the turtledeck bulkhead.
Bryan Cotton wrote:The spring is a good secondary safety. Good use of the checklist is crucial. An updated locking system like the one John Monett shared, or the one Peter Anson sells seem like a good idea.
Bryan Cotton wrote:I believe if you turn the latch around, but don't pin it, the canopy will still open.
Bryan Cotton wrote:even with a good alignment pin, if the latch is not locked to the frame.
Bryan Cotton wrote:Check out this thread:
http://www.sonexbuilders.net/viewtopic. ... tch#p50839
Regarding the Waiex video, there was no twisting until the canopy lifted. Then it was game over. The canopy is flimsy when open, but plenty strong when latched. If they had pinned it, or even if they had the spring to prevent the latch from migrating back, that would not have happened.
tps8903 wrote:My over center Canopy lock. I also added a safety pin for the forward portion with a flag that says "Install before Flight"
I don't know why the picture is upside down....
Tony4aro wrote:So you think it was just that the latch came undone, and it wasn't a failure?
Tony4aro wrote:tps8903 wrote:My over center Canopy lock. I also added a safety pin for the forward portion with a flag that says "Install before Flight"
I don't know why the picture is upside down....
Interesting. I like the idea of a large handle that has an obvious visual that it's not latched. Do you have any pics on how it actuates? FYI... it's the right way when you click on it. (Not upside down)
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