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Join Us At 0900ET, Friday, 4/10, for the LIVE Morning Brief.
Watch It LIVE at
www.airborne-live.net

Sun, Apr 06, 2003

An Evening with Trikers

By ANN Correspondent John Ballantyne

My excuse (as transparent as it may be) for this night's gathering is to learn how to achieve a private pilot certificate (glider) while flying a powered hang glider (usually called trikes or weight-shift control aircraft). This night, approximately 100 folks have gathered under the wings of 14 trikes in this one hangar. Trikes can really be jammed together, if necessary, for maximum hangar capacity.

Our host was hangar owner Don Wolf, at South Lakeland airport, four miles southwest of Lakeland, Florida on April 3, 2003. Don is a USUA trike instructor with over 15 years of experience and opens his hangar annually during Sun n Fun for a gathering of trikers from all over the world. South Lakeland Airport (X49) is a fly-in community that has many ultralight activities and an active EAA ultralight chapter.

Guest speakers were John Ballantyne (only person so far to have obtained FAA commercial and CFI-G in a trike) and Scott Toland (Chair of the FAA/ASTM committee to develop airworthiness standards for trikes). Other notables included Barry Palmatier, Mike Marron, Chuck Goodrum, and Jon Thornburgh.

Probably 20 dedicated individuals focused the presenters on the legal details of FAA regulations for trike pilot certification, plus trying to get a handle on the likely requirements for the FAA's long-promised Sport Pilot certificate -- that does not yet have established requirements. Problems include the fact that there are few airworthiness inspectors and pilot examiners who are willing to serve the trike community.

All of the others in attendance remained largely befuddled by the myriad of rules and regulations-actual and/or proposed. The broad feeling was that the complexity of the regulatory situation is overwhelming. When (if) FAA actually releases a final rule for Sport Pilot, it will clear up the fuzziness created, as many are trying to outguess what FAA could-might-maybe require. Issuance of a final rule will surely contain elements that do not suit every taste, but, at least, there would be a factual basis for debate. We'll keep you updated...

FMI: http://www.mindspring.com/~trikes/links.html

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