Help Rename The Parrot, Win A Valuable Prize
"What's in a name?" was a line that William Shakespeare put in
the mouth of one of his better-known characters. But then, no one
ever offered him a Garmin GPSMAP 396 for solving a thorny marketing
problem. The problem? A plane that outperforms its low-flying
name.

"Great plane, but what's with the name?" That was a common
reaction to the Czech Aircraft Works Parrot Special Light Sport
Aircraft when the factory-built, all-metal high-winger made its
debut.
Chip Erwin, the president of Czech Aircraft Works (CZAW) and
designer of the plane, might have resisted changing the name -- he
dreamed it up in the first place -- but instead, he's come to agree
that "Parrot" doesn't fit. Now he and the airplane's importer and
sales and service firm are looking for a better name for the
plane.
"The Parrot, as a bird,
isn’t a particularly good cross-country flier," Erwin
explains. "But the Parrot, as an airplane, is, well, brilliant."
(He might be slightly biased here -- he designed it, after all).
"It's as fast as the rules allow. Its streamlined, clean shape
allows long-range cruise at mild power settings; it's roomy and
comfortable, with plenty of useful load; and it handles so well...
It just doesn't make sense to call such a machine a 'Parrot.'"
Danny DeFelici, who heads Sport Aircraft Works, the importer of
several aircraft including the (for now) Parrot, agrees. "It ought
to be called something that reflects the engineering and the
performance. Or maybe it should describe the styling; the
hydroformed, compound curves in the sheetmetal are so clean and
modern-looking. The all-metal construction is so comfortable,
repairable, insurable -- it’s not a 'Parrot.' It's...
something else, something cooler."
That Parrot (or whatever it will be called) is a unique SLSA.
Thanks to that hydroformed construction, and the experienced
aircraft metalworkers that manufacture the plane, many pilots
mistake the sleek plane for a composite design, but it's actually
made of riveted aluminum, just like a Cessna.
Erwin's design combines two components seldom seen together, a
high-visibility bubble canopy and a high wing, using an imaginative
planform with a forward-swept wing. It not only works
aerodynamically and structurally, but also visually: the airplane
is strikingly attractive, the photographs here don't do it
justice.

These airplanes (the Parrot and its stablemates, the Mermaid
amphibian and Sport Cruiser low-cost SLSA) are the product of a
unique, efficient international partnership. Chip Erwin's company
builds the planes in Stare Mesto (literally "Old Town") in the
Czech Republic, where Wisconsin native Erwin makes his home these
days. While the planes are built in Europe by Czech craftsmen, from
the beginning, Chip has insisted that they use parts and tools
familiar to American mechanics, for maintainability; unlike some
European metal SLSAs, the aluminum used is standard American alloy
and dimensions, exported from the USA, for example. Danny
DeFelici's Florida firm imports the complete planes, and Danny does
a lot of the development work and test flying. Sportair USA
International Sport Aircraft, headed by retired fighter pilot Bill
Canino, will provide sales and service.

Canino will be showing a brand-new Parrot at AirVenture this
week. "The Parrot will be on the most prominent corner of our site
and the first thing you see from the main concourse," he promised.
SportAir USA is already familiar with the high quality of Czech
aircraft production -- it's already selling the StingSport SLSA,
built in Hradec Kralove.
And if you go to the Sportair USA exhibit at Airventure 06 --
it's right inside the West Main Gate, and just south of the Cirrus
display -- you can not only see the plane in its last appearance as
a Parrot, you can also enter your suggestion for its new name.
Just to sweeten the pot, the winner doesn't just get to see his
or her name made real, but also walks off with a Garmin GPSMAP 396.
Much more than a handheld GPS, the 396 is Garmin's state of the art
If multiple entrants suggest the same name, a random drawing will
break the tie. The decision of the contest organizers is final.

The one hint that came through to us was that Chip Erwin and the
gang would really like a name that refers to or is inspired by the
particular strengths and capabilities of the airplane, as recounted
by Erwin and Defelici above.
Don't choose "Machbuster Thundercrunch," though; it's taken.
That's Aero-News Editor-In-Chief Jim Campbell's entry.
The pixel-stained wretches of Aero-News have another request,
too: leave "Sport," "Air" and "Star" out of it, as we're already
gnashing our garments and rending our teeth trying to keep them
straight.

And no word yet on whether unsuccessful name bids will get a
consolation prize -- maybe a cracker?