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Flight Reports
Arion Lightning
Test pilot Chuck Berthe flew the Arion Lightning not once but twice, in two different factory demonstrators. The first flight raised concerns about the trim system and longitudinal stability, while the second flight (months later) impressed with improvements to the trim system and the consequent betterment of the airplane’s handling characteristics.

Remember When: The BD-5 Micro
The BD-5’s reputation precedes it: long in development, company bankruptcy, investor losses, challenging to fly, early accidents. With an introduction like that, who would think this micro plane would be such a positively straightforward blast to fly? By Bob Grimstead.

Builder Spotlight
Designer Spotlight: John Thorp
John W. Thorp has had a profound influence on both homebuilding and on aviation in general. If you’ve flown Piper Cherokees or know of the all-flying tail, you’re familiar with his design principles, and his T-18 is still a favorite worldwide; by Amy Laboda.

Build Your Skills: Fabric
This month, fabric expert Ron Alexander discusses attaching the fabric to the aircraft parts using either a pre-sewn envelope or individually cut pieces of fabric. The process is optimized for strength in flight as well as aesthetic appeal.

All About Avionics: Cutting The Metal
Here’s something to ponder: By the time you get to the point where you are ready to build the panel in your homebuilt aircraft, you’ve already mastered many of the skills and techniques you’ll need to do it by virtue of completing the airframe. That statement is all the more credible when it comes from someone with a vested interest in the subject, our own avionics expert Stein Bruch.

To Dream The (Almost Impossible) Dream
Almost from the beginning of aviation, the idea of a plane you could drive/car you could fly has captured both the popular imagination and the hearts of some dedicated experimentalists. The dream remains alive, and realization, the author says, is fettered only by the lack of willing investors; by Murry L. Rozansky.

To Launch A Light Sport
Author Bob Fritz got the bad news that he would likely not pass his FAA medical and was faced with a choice: Finish the RV he was working on and resign himself to flying with a partner, or try to find a suitable Light Sport Aircraft that he could build and fly solo. In this first installment in the series, he details his search for the right design and reveals the decision he ultimately made.

Completions
Builders share their experiences.

Shop Talk
The Home Machinist
This month Home Machinist Bob Fritz answers readers’ letters and passes along some of their better ideas.

Aero 'Lectrics
Columnist Jim Weir puts two, two, two LED lights in one hole, angled to ensure the maximum nav light visibility in any direction. He explains how to put the system together and explains why heat matters.

Designer's Notebook
Wind Tunnel
The discussion of lateral/directional stability continues with an examination of dihedral effect and the effect of roll; by Barnaby Wainfan.

Exploring
Around the Patch
Homebuilt aircraft manufacturers are sometimes reluctant to admit that they have created a less than perfect design, let alone offer a fix. Arion Aircraft’s Nick Otterback is bucking that tide; by Marc Cook.

What's New
Cub Crafters introduces a Carbon Cub kit, a new study of LSAs may affect insurance rates, and AeroLEDs offers new LED anti-collision/landing lights; edited by Mary Bernard.

Down to Earth
A month after the engine was first started on the RV-10, author Amy Laboda and her husband, Barry Marz, scheduled a visit from DAR Ray Howell, received the airworthiness certificate, and commenced ground runs. It sounds simple, but so much effort went into getting that little piece of paper.

Light Stuff
As Light Sport Aircraft become more popular, so too will the desire to learn more about maintaining one of the most common engines used in these designs, the Rotax four-strokes. Columnist Dave Martin goes back to school to learn about routine Rotax maintenance as well as safe operation of the popular engine.

Kit Bits
Contributors

Letters

List of Advertisers

Builders' Marketplace

The Classified Builder

Kit Stuff
Drawing on experience; by cartoonist Robrucha.

September 2008 Links
Follow these links to visit the web sites of companies you read about in the September issue.


Around the Patch
Kansas City Dawn Patrol



What's New
Cub Crafters Carbon Club
AeroLEDs SUNLite
Avemco



Arion Lightning
Arion Aircraft



Remember When: The BD-5 Micro
Sport Aircraft Builder's Club (Australia)



Designer Sportlight: John Thorp
Eklund Engineering
T-18 Builders Group



Build Your Skills: Fabric
SportAir Workshops



All About Avionics: Cutting Metal
Epanel
Panel Planner
Xpanel



To Dream The (Almost) Impossible Dream
Aerocar
Fiddler's Green Aerocar
Roadable Times
Smithsonian
Video Footage
Volante Aircraft



Home Machinist
Enco Tools



Light Stuff
Aero Technical Institute



* * * View Reader Links from previous months:
Table of Contents and Reader's Links from December 2006 to Present

Headlines
First Customer Texas Sport Cub Flies

RVs Top 6000 Flying

The FAA Reopens "51% Rule" Comment Period, ends December 15



Garmin Introduces a Big-Screen Portable GPS

GlobalAir.com's Fuel Route Planner in Beta

Oshkosh: 2008 Goes Into the Books Exceeding Expectations



Stewart Systems Debuts Nontoxic Epoxy Primer

Lighting: Controlled

UAV Produces Touch EFIS