Hi all,
I'm a private pilot currently flying a 2 place Excalibur experimental on floats but found out both my wife and 10 year old enjoy flying. I searched for a bigger plane and being a big hunter and with a wife from Canada, I found the perfect match. The Bearhawk! I bought a 4 place quick build kit 5 months ago with about 450 hours of work in it. It was a lucky find with great craftsmanship. All control cables are rigged, windshield is on, firewall, brakes and boot cowl complete, it's on wheels and one wing is 90% done. And the seats are finished! Yes, I'm cheating, but I think this way I can actually finish one! By next Sept? I know that's a tall order but that's the goal anyway. I'd be eternally grateful if any of you can point me to the answer to just one question (for now). This plane will definitely find its way to floats in the first couple years of its life. I've seen all of the topics on fuselage mods, and a simple sketch from a 1996 Beartracks publication, but I don't think I've come across anything definitive on how to strengthen the fuselage for a float install. Tons of posts asking the question though. I see some instances of swapping tubes for stronger ones, but is that intended for a scratch build? Can the quick build be simply added to for strengthening rather than replacing? I'll send a gift card for Outback Steak House to the first person that can point me to dummy proof instructions on how I need to mod/strengthen the fuselage for the rear float attach fittings. Thank you to all in advance and I can't wait to get knee deep in this airplane and the Bearhawk flight club.
Brad
brad@louisiana-outdoors.com
I'm a private pilot currently flying a 2 place Excalibur experimental on floats but found out both my wife and 10 year old enjoy flying. I searched for a bigger plane and being a big hunter and with a wife from Canada, I found the perfect match. The Bearhawk! I bought a 4 place quick build kit 5 months ago with about 450 hours of work in it. It was a lucky find with great craftsmanship. All control cables are rigged, windshield is on, firewall, brakes and boot cowl complete, it's on wheels and one wing is 90% done. And the seats are finished! Yes, I'm cheating, but I think this way I can actually finish one! By next Sept? I know that's a tall order but that's the goal anyway. I'd be eternally grateful if any of you can point me to the answer to just one question (for now). This plane will definitely find its way to floats in the first couple years of its life. I've seen all of the topics on fuselage mods, and a simple sketch from a 1996 Beartracks publication, but I don't think I've come across anything definitive on how to strengthen the fuselage for a float install. Tons of posts asking the question though. I see some instances of swapping tubes for stronger ones, but is that intended for a scratch build? Can the quick build be simply added to for strengthening rather than replacing? I'll send a gift card for Outback Steak House to the first person that can point me to dummy proof instructions on how I need to mod/strengthen the fuselage for the rear float attach fittings. Thank you to all in advance and I can't wait to get knee deep in this airplane and the Bearhawk flight club.
Brad
brad@louisiana-outdoors.com
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