15 May 2025, 02:06 [ UTC - 5; DST ]
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Post subject: Re: ICON A5 Incredible Engineering Feat Posted: 28 May 2012, 19:29 |
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Joined: 01/29/08 Posts: 26338 Post Likes: +13079 Location: Walterboro, SC. KRBW
Aircraft: PC12NG
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Username Protected wrote: You missed HIS point! this guy is brilliant. I have been following him since the very beginning. Take a little time and read his Bio. He is trying to bring people into aviation that have never even set behind the controls of a private plane, let alone flown one. To do what you are suggesting would require an aquisition cost far beyond most peoples comfort zone/ability. I have no idea, but it would not surprise me if there is not a " Icon Skunk Works" secretly working on what you are talking about. But they have to crawl before they can walk. Dont underestimate this guy, he has assembled the absolute very best of aviation gene pool and I believe this might just be the next Cessna 172, only this one will float on purpose!! Who are you talking about? The guy that invented the ICON? Can the ICON be used as a trainer?
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Post subject: Re: ICON A5 Incredible Engineering Feat Posted: 28 May 2012, 19:35 |
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Joined: 12/10/08 Posts: 10014 Post Likes: +2440 Location: Arizona (KSEZ)
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Username Protected wrote: Can the ICON be used as a trainer?
Don't you need a medical to be a student pilot or does LSA waive that requirement also?
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Post subject: Re: ICON A5 Incredible Engineering Feat Posted: 28 May 2012, 19:45 |
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Joined: 07/21/08 Posts: 5720 Post Likes: +7078 Location: Decatur, TX (XA99)
Aircraft: 1979 Bonanza A36
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From the website: "Before graduating from Stanford Business School in 2005 and founding ICON, Kirk flew F-16s in the U.S. Air Force and 767s for American Airlines. Prior to the USAF, he worked in both aviation and aerospace engineering most of his early career. After earning his BS in Mechanical Engineering from Clemson University, he was the Director of Engineering at an aerospace contractor before returning for his Masters in Engineering from Stanford University in 1995, specializing in manufacturing" He is not exactly an amateur. Not to mention his list of investors. It reads like a who's who of the Fortune 500. I dont think an expensive cross country amphib would sell anyway. I do think, however, that Icon could join the fast, composite, cross country market later on. Username Protected wrote: You missed HIS point! this guy is brilliant. I have been following him since the very beginning. Take a little time and read his Bio. He is trying to bring people into aviation that have never even set behind the controls of a private plane, let alone flown one. To do what you are suggesting would require an aquisition cost far beyond most peoples comfort zone/ability. I have no idea, but it would not surprise me if there is not a " Icon Skunk Works" secretly working on what you are talking about. But they have to crawl before they can walk. Dont underestimate this guy, he has assembled the absolute very best of aviation gene pool and I believe this might just be the next Cessna 172, only this one will float on purpose!! Who are you talking about? The guy that invented the ICON? Can the ICON be used as a trainer?
_________________ I'm just here for the free snacks
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Post subject: Re: ICON A5 Incredible Engineering Feat Posted: 28 May 2012, 20:39 |
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Joined: 01/29/08 Posts: 26338 Post Likes: +13079 Location: Walterboro, SC. KRBW
Aircraft: PC12NG
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Username Protected wrote: Jason,
If you get your sea plane rating then you'll get the point! Then I'll get a turbine beaver. I don't think you need a sea plane rating for the Icon. Do you? BTW, I love the idea of the ICON. I just wish they weren't making it an LSA. I love the idea of an amphib Bonanza. It'd be great!
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Post subject: Re: ICON A5 Incredible Engineering Feat Posted: 28 May 2012, 21:04 |
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Joined: 07/26/10 Posts: 4296 Post Likes: +196 Location: West Palm Beach, FL (KLNA)
Aircraft: 1979 Duke B60
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Username Protected wrote: Jason,
If you get your sea plane rating then you'll get the point! Then I'll get a turbine beaver. I don't think you need a sea plane rating for the Icon. Do you? BTW, I love the idea of the ICON. I just wish they weren't making it an LSA. I love the idea of an amphib Bonanza. It'd be great!
No sea rating, just training endorsement like high-performance/complex..
It's a 100 dollar hamburger flyer, lake-hopping, simple, low and slow..
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Post subject: Re: ICON A5 Incredible Engineering Feat Posted: 28 May 2012, 21:54 |
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Joined: 05/11/10 Posts: 13017 Post Likes: +12634 Location: Indiana
Aircraft: Cessna 185, RV-7
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Username Protected wrote: No sea rating, just training endorsement like high-performance/complex.. Are you sure about that? If you're operating it as a seaplane, it seems you'd need a seaplane rating. Or does the Light Sport situation change that?
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Post subject: Re: ICON A5 Incredible Engineering Feat Posted: 29 May 2012, 09:13 |
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Joined: 08/11/08 Posts: 1437 Post Likes: +311 Location: KAAF Apalachicola, Fl
Aircraft: CCSS: N3YC
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Username Protected wrote: I wonder what the max wave-height is to land this thing. A carbon-cub ambphibian would be more attractive the way I look at it. It will not surprise you greatly that I agree with you on this one, Florian  . And...whilst the cost would be higher, you wouldn't have to wait until 2015 for delivery. I think the current delivery date for a CCSS is in December. And damn, that would be huge fun! As my...err...driveway (see the hitch in my airfield thread)...matures with the grass we plan, I may just go that way. There are actually some pretty good lakes near us, and it appears that the floats have little negative effect on the performance.  Take-off and landing distances on land are close to the same and cruise speed is also about the same. All that and just a bolt-on. And it performs: against the aircam on floats in a contest...winner: CCSS http://www.youtube.com/watch?v=7zEkDMlAC1UJim
_________________ Jim Harper Montgomery, AL and Apalachicola, FL
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Post subject: Re: ICON A5 Incredible Engineering Feat Posted: 29 May 2012, 13:01 |
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Joined: 08/03/08 Posts: 16153 Post Likes: +8866 Location: 2W5
Aircraft: A36
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Username Protected wrote: And damn, that would be huge fun! As my...err...driveway (see the hitch in my airfield thread)...matures with the grass we plan, I may just go that way. There are actually some pretty good lakes near us, and it appears that the floats have little negative effect on the performance.  Take-off and landing distances on land are close to the same and cruise speed is also about the same. How is that going to work with the height of your hangar (ahem, sorry, large toolshed) and that inclined ramp you have in front of it ?
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