I'm seeing some 4 place BH listed at 2700# and some at 2750# wheres the 50# coming from, and the website lists it as only 2700# with floats?
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GW 2700 vs 2750
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You can list your GW as anything you want really, it's up to you as a builder. First I've seen of 2750lbs, I don't know if the extra 50lbs is arbitrary or not, maybe extra baggage? The Bearhawk 4-Place is approved for 2700lbs landing on floats by Bob as I understand, but some builders set their maximum takeoff weight (MTOW) at 2700lbs and specify the maximum landing weight as 2500lbs on normal gear. This what I plan to do at least.
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2,500 lbs is the maximum landing weight approved by Bob, for the Bearhawk 4 place land-plane.
If you land at a heavier weight than 2,500 lbs, there is a risk of bottoming out the suspension and bending the steel tube structure.
The 2,700 lbs is only a take-off weight, and you need to burn 200 lbs of fuel to land - which is not an insignificant amount of fuel. Or throw some gear out the window, whichever you prefer. If you were forced down by weather before you could burn the fuel, then the landing would be a delicate affair.
The plane feel heavy at 2,500 lbs, and at 2700 it's decidedly weighed down. You can feel the weight when you taxi. In my machine some doors need an extra push to shut securely (fuselage is flexing under the weight). The plane can take it, but my point is going over 2,700 lbs is not something to be taken lightly. No pun intended.
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My guess is that the 2750 comes from Maules which have a 2500lb gross that can get bumped to 2750 when on floats. Since the planes look so similar they must be capable of the same weights...right?Scratch Built 4-place Bearhawk. Continental IO-360, 88" C203 McCauley prop.
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Originally posted by schu View Post
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Originally posted by Battson View Post2,500 lbs is the maximum landing weight approved by Bob, for the Bearhawk 4 place land-plane.
If you land at a heavier weight than 2,500 lbs, there is a risk of bottoming out the suspension and bending the steel tube structure.
The 2,700 lbs is only a take-off weight, and you need to burn 200 lbs of fuel to land - which is not an insignificant amount of fuel. Or throw some gear out the window, whichever you prefer. If you were forced down by weather before you could burn the fuel, then the landing would be a delicate affair.
The plane feel heavy at 2,500 lbs, and at 2700 it's decidedly weighed down. You can feel the weight when you taxi. In my machine some doors need an extra push to shut securely (fuselage is flexing under the weight). The plane can take it, but my point is going over 2,700 lbs is not something to be taken lightly. No pun intended.
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Originally posted by AK2ID View Post
You guys not a fan of the yoke?
One could easily argue that entry and egress are easier without the stick in the way. I suppose if one had never been exposed to flying a stick and had only flown a wheel, the comfort level might lead that individual to forego the stick, in favor of weight and complication. For more than 30 years, my wife has claimed that she'd learn to fly if our plane had a steering wheel. So, I can see that the familiarity of the steering wheel brings a degree of 'comfort' to some folks. And some might observe a sound reason that I've never owned a plane with a wheel... We all have our reasons.
Bill
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Originally posted by Bdflies View Post
Well, the discussion of sticks vs yokes is similar to discussing Fords vs Chevy's or Blondes and Brunettes. If you talk long enough, somebody's feelings are bound to get hurt. Personally, I think a stick is easier and more intuitive to fly. No matter what move you want to make, it's a single displacement of the control, vs a turn and push or pull. But that's a subjective opinion. In a small plane, yokes take up valuable panel real estate. The mechanism behind the panel that converts rotation to aileron movement and fore/aft to elevator movements is complex and adds weight, not to mention the area behind the panel that's not available for other "stuff".
One could easily argue that entry and egress are easier without the stick in the way. I suppose if one had never been exposed to flying a stick and had only flown a wheel, the comfort level might lead that individual to forego the stick, in favor of weight and complication. For more than 30 years, my wife has claimed that she'd learn to fly if our plane had a steering wheel. So, I can see that the familiarity of the steering wheel brings a degree of 'comfort' to some folks. And some might observe a sound reason that I've never owned a plane with a wheel... We all have our reasons.
Bill
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Sticks are lighter. You get used to both very quickly. I have flown right hand, left hand, stick, yoke. A dozen hours in, it was natural. I have never quite recovered from FBW or glass cockpits. I am not sure I ever will. PFD and ND are so natural, and provide so much SA, 10 hours in, you will never want to go back. And now they are cheap and light.
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watermark.jpg?modified=1516560780.jpgwatermark.jpg?modified=1516561216.jpgOriginally posted by schu View PostSpeaking of Maules..
This builder put a yoke in his Bearhawk:
https://www.barnstormers.com/classif...wk+250+HP.html
I wonder why....
Only 70 hours on the thing too...
Looks like seaplane doors.
Yokes! Yoke might not suit everyone, but still he's done a nice job of it.
Panel shape is very custom.
Also the rudder trim, that is something different. Lots of talk about that, interesting to see it done.
Looks like his baggage area stops one station too soon... almost zero baggage room if I have seen that correctly...??
His main elevator trim tabs are ENORMOUS. That thing will be super-sensitive to pitch trim.
Matching green tinted windows and screen. Some attention to details there.
I can't tell what it is, but there is something custom going on with the cargo area door / exterior panel.
I am putting these photos here for future generations of builders, Barnstormers will delete them in no time.
watermark.jpg?modified=1516560380.jpgwatermark.jpg?modified=1516560577.jpgLast edited by Battson; 01-25-2018, 03:56 PM.
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