LSA's Come And Go, Tragic Accidents Mar The Industry
2011 was not a very good year for the air show industry,
with several high-profile accidents leading to the NTSB to call for
a special hearing on air show and air race safety ... which will
take place in January 2012.

Meanwhile, Piper dropped its Piper Sport offering, leaving
Cessna as the only legacy manufacturer with an LSA in its stable
... and that airplane got a lot more expensive. But other LSA
manufacturers had a pretty good year. Here are Sport
Aviation's top stories of 2011.
January
In what are certainly still difficult economic times, LSA
manufacturer Flight Design says it is nearly ready to
unveil its new four-place CT series airplane.
Company CEO Matthias Betsch said that the company is nearing
completion on a proof-of-concept four seat model of the CT.

Piper Aircraft Inc. said in a news release it was
terminating its business relationship with Czech
Republic-based Czech Sport Aircraft to market that
company’s Light Sport Aircraft, citing differences in
business philosophies.
Flight Design earned
Design Organization Approval (DOA) from the EASA. The
approval allows Flight Design to pursue Type Certification of
Aircraft with EASA for non-complex aircraft up to 1.200 kilograms
(2,640 pounds) MTOW. The EASA approval included Flight Design
divisions involved with the production in Kherson, Ukraine plus
final assembly and flight testing in Kamenz, Germany.
Stick and Rudder Aviation owner Paul Leadabrand made a
2100 mile flight from Boise, ID to Sebring, FL
in a 100% factory-built Kitfox LSA. One might think it's to escape
what has been a fairly brutal Idaho winter, but Leadabrand says the
purpose of the flight was to show off the Kitfox's capabilities,
reliability, and economy.
A new "Personal Air Vehicle" (PAV) being developed by Wichita
Falls, TX-based Carter Aviation Technologies (Carter)
completed its
first milestone in flight-testing. The PAV is
Carter's second generation, proof-of-concept aircraft set to
demonstrate their revolutionary SR/CTM technology - a combination
of rotorcraft and fixed-wing aerodynamics. The milestone flight
designation is outlined in an economic development incentive
agreement that Carter has with the city of Wichita Falls.
At the start of the annual U.S. Sport Aviation Expo in Sebring,
FL, Cessna told ANN that it has received
more than 60 Skycatcher light sport aircraft from Shenyang
Aircraft Corporation. In conjunction with its
reassembly site at Yingling Aviation in Wichita, KS, Cessna has
delivered more than 30 Skycatchers.
Dallas-based IndUS Aviation, along with its Chinese partner IPI
Technologies and private investors in China, progressed towards the
move of production of the Thorpedo Light Sport
Aircraft to the new LuYangHu General Aviation
Development Zone in Weinan, China.
One of the sweetest-flying bipes of all time, the Great Lakes
Model 2T-1A-1/2,
returned to the world of certified serial
production. The Great Lakes Model 2T-1A-1/2 is a fully
aerobatic 180 horsepower aircraft targeted at pilots and flight
schools looking for a highly capable aerobatic aircraft with docile
handling attributes. The aircraft was most recently produced in the
1980, and is type certificated in the aerobatic category.
February
The owner of an 80-acre olive farm near Santa Rosa, California
continued to pursue a 2009 lawsuit which
grounded most ballooning activities in the region, as well as
pest control and other aviation activities. JCM Farming later
added a real estate company as defendants, and
subpoenaed a couple who were passengers in a
balloon operated by Magical Adventure Balloon
Rides.

Wichita Falls, TX-based Carter Aerospace Development
said they
completed the first phase of flight-testing of
their new Personal Air Vehicle (PAV). The PAV began flight-testing
in October 2010 with the goal of testing and refining the flight
control systems for the aircraft.
Four major general aviation organizations often referred to as
"the letter groups" are calling on the FAA to change its rules to
make it easier for Sport Pilots to pursue additional
training and higher level pilot certificates. The EAA,
GAMA, AOPA, and NAFI petitioned the FAA to amend the federal
aviation regulations (14 CFR Part 61) so that flight hours accrued
while earning a Sport Pilot certificate can count toward additional
ratings and certificates.
The second generation of the electric-powered two-seat
self-launching glider Taurus Electro
is now in serial production and available to
customers world-wide. Pipistrel announced that more than 20 owners
will receive their aircraft by the end of 2011.
March
Quest Aircraft Company, manufacturer of the Kodiak, announced
that as part of its long term corporate strategy it has
completed a financing transaction for recapitalization and
new investment. The additional funding is from private
investors and will provide the company with continued financial
stability.

Kyle and Amanda Franklin, he the son of the legendary Jimmy
Franklin, and she the daughter of renowned airshow flyer Bobby
Younkin (as well as Matt Younkin's sister) were flying their
well-known "Pirated Skies" act when the accident took place. The
accident occurred as the result of an engine
failure suffered by the Franklin's well-known Waco
biplane. Reports indicate that the engine failed, bringing the bipe
down off-airport, where impact damage created a fire and issues in
extracting Amanda... in the process, burning both Kyle and Amanda
'extensively.'
Sonex Aircraft has begun
accepting refundable deposits to reserve kit
production slots for the Onex single-place, folding-wing, aerobatic
sport aircraft. Onex airframe kit deliveries were expected to begin
by mid-year, with tail kit deliveries beginning much sooner.
After years of complaints and an impressive amount of online
consumer activism, Doug Hart, who was consistently been proven to
have taken money for aircraft kits and parts that have not been
delivered, in whole or in part; has
been stopped from victimizing any more fellow
flyers. This result occurred thanks to an active
aero-consumer effort (primarily online) and the action of the MO
AG's office.
The EASA has granted
Type Certification for the Sbach 342, a two
seat aerobatic aircraft. The Sbach 342 can claim many firsts,
including the first certified all-carbon fiber aerobatic aircraft,
the first subjected to full occupant crash testing, the first with
the main fuel tank located in a separately vented compartment away
from the cockpit.
April
The long-suffering folks building the much-delayed Seawind
Amphibian say they are "alive and well" and
progressing through certification with two
important milestones now behind them. The company completed flutter
testing on the airplane March 24. With the successful completion of
the flutter testing and a number of other developmental test
flights, the design configuration of the airplane is now
frozen.

Van's Aircraft introduced their new Light Sport Aircraft, the
RV-12, just over three years ago. Well over five hundred kits have
been sold since then, and in April, the
198th kit to ship became 100th RV-12 to
fly.
In a positive development for recreational aviation, at least in
the state of New Mexico, Governor Susana Martinez signed House Bill
12 into law on April 6th. This law adds
"operation of aircraft" to the state's existing
Recreational Use Statute. "This is a great step for
the recreational pilots, the backcountry, and of course, the state
of New Mexico" said New Mexico Pilot Association (NMPA) President
Joyce Woods.
Flight Design, which has been building two-place LSA aircraft
and has shown some staying power in the LSA market, released the
specs for its
planned four-place C4 airplane. The data was
presented Thursday in Germany at the AERO Friedrichshafen air
show.
May
A jury in Kansas awarded $48 million to the families of five of
the six people fatally injured when a DHC-6 Twin Otter carrying
skydivers suffered a catastrophic engine failure just after takeoff
and
went down near Sullivan Airport in rural
Missouri southwest of St. Louis. The family of
one of those killed in the accident did not participate in the
lawsuit.
A Piper Sport LSA went down on a ferry flight from Florida to
Illinois. Early police reports indicated that the
wreckage went down in widely separated
portions and that the pilot was found out of, and
away, from the primary impact site.
June
Organizers of air shows at the Millville Army Air Field Museum
in New Jersey said they are
done with "acrobatic jet teams" after a
short-notice cancellation by the Navy's Blue Angels reportedly cut
deeply into the show's bottom line. The Navy's demonstration team
canceled appearances at several venues after the team recovered
from a maneuver too low at an air show in Virginia in May. The
commander of the Blue Angels has since stepped down from his
post.

A five-person FAA National Kit Evaluation Team (NKET) concluded
a two day visit to Zenith Aircraft Company in Mexico, Missouri. In
a letter dated June 24, 2011, Terry Allen, manager of the FAA
Production and Airworthiness Division, stated that the Evaluation
Team determined that the
kit will allow an amateur builder to meet the major portion
requirement the "51-percent" requirement to register
the aircraft as Amateur-Built - Experimental.
ICON Aircraft announced that it closed a
$25 million round of equity funding in June. The round
will fund the company through the completion of its ongoing
engineering development program, manufacturing setup, and the
beginning of production of its A5 amphibious sport plane.
July
The BD-Micro Technologies, (BMT) FLS Microjet
completed Phase I flight testing, and all
performance expectations were either met or exceeded. Better known
as the “James Bond jet”, the BD-5J for the first time
ever is available as a complete, ready to assemble, integrated
airframe, avionics, and powerplant systems package. BMT is
currently taking orders for a limited production run of the FLS
Microjet kit.

The Transition Roadable Aircraft officially received a
grant of all of the special exemptions it had
requested from the National Highway Traffic Safety Administration
(NHTSA). Terrafugia’s Transition is the first combined
flying-driving vehicle to receive such special consideration from
the Department of Transportation since the Federal Motor Vehicle
Safety Standards came into being in the 1970s.
SportairUSA, the American marketer and distributor of the
Dallair FR-100 Snap!, had the American production prototype of the aerobatic LSA at
AirVenture 2011. The Snap! will be unveiled during a
presentation at the International Aerobics Club (IAC) headquarters,
at 1200 CDT, Tuesday, July 26th, and will be on display at the LSA
Mall for the remainder of the week.
EAA designated
July 25, 2011 as the Official Chris Heintz Day
and over 50 owners and builders of the aircraft he designed
convened at AirVenture this week to honor Chris and be part of the
world’s largest gathering of experimental aircraft. Through
the company he started, literally in his garage, Zenair Ltd., Chris
has introduced more than twelve successful kit aircraft designs
that are estimated to have produced more than 800 aircraft
presently flying around the world in 48 different countries.
August
SportairUSA, the American marketer and distributor light sport
aircraft, announced EPA
power engines and performance parts for Rotax.
SportairUSA is currently showing the Dallair FR-100 Light Sport
Aerobat, powered by EPApower, at AirVenture 2011.

Sonex Aircraft said that the SubSonex jet aircraft prototype,
JSX-1,
made its maiden flight at Wittman Regional
Airport in Oshkosh, WI. The SubSonex was piloted by Bob Carlton, an
air show performer and owner of Desert Aerospace LLC.
ICON Aircraft announced that it
received 143 deposits for its A5 amphibious Light Sport
Aircraft during the week-long 2011 EAA AirVenture Show
in Oshkosh, Wisconsin. The new orders take ICON’s order book
to position #694, and represent record levels of interest for sport
flying and the ICON A5 specifically.
The Ultimate Air Racing Championships that ANN profiled several
weeks ago appears to be stuck in 'idle.' FAA Spokesperson, Ian
Gregor, has confirmed that the UARC request for approval of an
aggressive multi-plane, multi-obstacle, air racing platform
could not be proven to be safe enough to meet the FAA's
required standards.
It was been a long road back for Kyle Franklin. But seven months
after the tragic accident which eventually claimed his wife Amanda,
Kyle has announced on Facebook that he is
returning to the air show circuit.
Bryan Jensen
failed to recover from a maneuver described by
various local media sources as a spin or descending 'spiral' and
impacted the ground in a grass field away from spectators. The show
was closed thereafter and for the rest of the day. It was the
second of three accidents at airshows that weekend.

Wing walker Todd Green was engaged in a plane to helicopter
transfer and fell
from a height estimated at 200 feet. The
accident occurred at the Selfridge Air National Guard Base during a
weekend airshow at a location some 20 miles NE of Detroit.
September
Using a "prototype LSA Audit Program", the FAA inspected Criquet
Aviation USA, Inc., the manufacturers of the Storch FI-156 LSA. The
result of this July 13th audit, one of the first of its kind, was
the rescinding of Criquet Aviation's ability to offer products with
Special Flight Permits, S-LSA or E-LSA airworthiness certificates.
In other words... grounded.
Hot air balloonists in California achieved
what may be a hollow victory over JCM Farming,
Inc. of Solana Beach. The corporation constructed a fortified
compound and erected signs warning of guard dogs and armed response
to trespassers on land zoned for agricultural use.

The attempt of an Irish cancer survivor to become the first
person in history to circumnavigate the globe in an autogyro is
again at risk for being
interrupted for the winter.
The NTSB's preliminary report in the accident which fatally
injured air show stuntman Todd Green suggests he attempted to reach
for the skid of the helicopter
before it was in the correct position to
complete the stunt. Green lost his footing on the Stearman biplane
in the attempt to transfer between it and a helicopter flying
overhead during an air show at Selfridge Air National Guard Base on
August 21st.
After over 40 years of ownership and several unsuccessful
attempts to sell previously, Revo Inc. again
offered the assets of Lake Aircraft for sale.
Reportedly the only FAA-certified single-engine amphibious airplane
produced in the world, the offering included all of the
intellectual property and equipment needed to manufacture the Lake
Renegade, Seafury and Seawolf airplanes.
One aircraft from the Trojan Horsemen Warbird Formation
Acrobatic Team
went down at the Thunder Over the Blueridge Open House And
Airshow. According to media reports, the accident
occurred when two of the aircraft, flying in opposing maneuvers
formation, passed and separated, with the westbound aircraft having
'lost control, rolled and crashed on the runway in front of the
hangars.'

At approximately 4:20 p.m. on Friday, Sept. 16, during Unlimited
Class qualifying, the P-51 Mustang “Galloping Ghost,”
piloted by Jimmy Leeward,
crashed into the box seat area in front of the main
grandstand.
Lisa Airplanes developed what it says is a unique light airplane
able to land on either pavement, grass, water or
snow. And after presenting the aircraft on several
occasions in its home country of France, the company said it was
ready to bring the Akoya to the international market.
The leading theory, and we're quick to stress that it is only a
theory, behind what may have led to the accident at the Reno Air
Race points to the possibility that pilot Jimmy Leeward blacked out
after his modified P-51 pitched up sharply before nosing over and
impacting the ground. Analysis points to the
loss of an elevator trim tab as a possible
factor in the accident.
U.S. Congressman Sam Graves, Co-Chair of the House Aviation
Caucus, came out strongly
against any new regulations for air shows in
the wake of the tragedies in Selfridge, MI, Reno, NV, and
Martinsburg, WV. He issued a statement Thursday responding to calls
to examine whether more regulations are needed for air shows.
October

At the NASA Green Flight Challenge, Erik Lindbergh, founder of
LEAP, announced the first winner of the Lindbergh Prize for
Quietest Aircraft.
The prize was awarded to e-Genius, a two-seat
electric airplane designed and built by University of Stuttgart
Institute of Aircraft Design under the leadership of Professor
Rudolf Voit-Nitschmann and his two assistants Len Schumann and
Steffen Geinitz, and piloted by Eric Raymond and Klaus Ohlmann.
The NTSB released its preliminary report for the accident which
fatally injured the pilot of a North American T-28C performing as
part of the Trojan Horsemen aerobatic team. The report
does not indicate anything overtly wrong with the accident
aircraft based on high-definition still and video
images captured during the performance.
A
new unofficial world speed record was set by Windsor, Ontario,
Canada racing pilot Will Whiteside in a Yak 3U. The flight took
place at the Bonneville Salt Flats in Utah. Whiteside flew his
modified Yak to an unofficial speed of 416 MPH.
The FAA has listened to those commenting on its proposed changes
to FAR Section 61.85 and has proposed an amendment to the new rule
pushing back the implementation of proficiency check requirements
for
pilots of single-place and experimental
turbojets for a year.
Following a nationwide search, the Board of Directors of the
Recreational Aviation Foundation (RAF) have announced Carl Hicks,
58 of Gig Harbor Washington, as their
first Executive Director.
Adventurer Norman Surplus has been
delayed for another winter in his quest to
become the first person to circumnavigate the globe in an autogyro.
He's conceded the need to park his yellow AutoGyro MT03, G-YROX, in
Japan to wait for the late arctic spring to arrive again before
crossing the Bering Straits to Alaska.
A post on the WACO Classic blog said they have officially
received the Type Certificate for the Great Lakes 2T-1A
series of aircraft. Now, with the TC in hand, WACO
Classic is able to better work with the FAA to return the Great
Lakes to the air.
The FAA announced in the Federal Register in July the
availability of ASTM International standard F2746–09,
Specification for
Pilot’s Operating Handbook (POH) for Light Sport
Airplanes, as well as ASTM F2245-10c, Specification
for Design and Performance of a Light Sport Airplane. Manufacturers
of fixed wing light sport aircraft were required to revise their
POHs for new production airplanes in accordance with these new
standards by no later than Nov. 12, 2011.
November
A Sussex County, DE, Councilman required back surgery after his
Aeros Trike went down on his first solo
flight. He was listed in serious condition at a Virginia Hospital
following the accident.
A grass-roots partnership of the primary sporting soaring
associations in the US, with the help of Kitty Hawk-based First
Flight Foundation, celebrated the centennial of Orville
Wright’s record soaring flight of 9 minutes 45 seconds set on
October 24, 1911. The event, called SOARING100,
attracted over 10,000 visitors to the Outer
Banks, NC venues of Jockey’s Ridge State Park and Wright
Brothers National Memorial.

Barbara Tolbert, who serves as executive director for the very
successful Arlington Fly-In in the Pacific Northwest,
was been elected Mayor of Arlington. Tolbert
won 1,290 votes of the 2,365 cast in the race, or 54.55
percent.
The Federation Aeronautique Internationale (FAI) said it would
award the
Louis Bleriot Medal to air racing pilot Richard
“Smokey” Young, director of Orange Coast
College's pilot aviation training program, at a ceremony in Los
Angeles November 17th. Young set a world speed record last year in
a piston-engine aircraft fueled by a new high-octane biofuel.
ANN received copies of a letter allegedly sent to a number (if
not all) of the current list of Skycatcher depositors in which
Cessna has raised the price, effective as of
January 1, 2012 to a whopping $149,900... well over $40K above the
price first quoted when the aircraft was introduced in 2006 --
$109,500.
The NTSB released what many will likely find to be an
unsatisfying probable cause report in the accident which eventually
cost Amanda Franklin her life. In its official report, the board
said the airplane lost engine power
"for undetermined reasons."
December
The NTSB announced plans to hold a hearing on
air race and air show safety on January
10th. The Board said that the hearing would focus on bringing
public attention
to the safety issues involved in aviation event
operations, and provide NTSB Members and investigative
staff with a deeper understanding of regulations, protocols and
practices used in the planning and operations of air shows and air
races. Information gathered in the hearing will assist NTSB staff
in the investigation of air show and air race incidents and
accidents.