South St Paul, Minn.-based Sierra Hotel Aero Inc., holder of the type
certificate for the Navion, says it is two to three years away from
bringing the aircraft back into production.
The type certificate
came up for auction about 10 years ago, said Chris Gardner, owner of
Sierra Hotel Aero. “At the time, we had been developing an STC to put a
baggage door on the aircraft, since the original didn’t have one,” he
said.
Gardner said he has always loved the design of the Navion,
which made him interested in the type certificate. “My father
originally had one in early 1960s, then got another one in the early
1990s, and I helped him work on the aircraft,” he recalled. “I had
experience with the P-51 (Mustang), and was interested in how the
airplanes were similar in design.
The Navion was originally
built in the late 1940s by North American Aviation, the manufacturer
that also built the P-51. It was built to target what was seen as a
growing post-war civilian market,Learn how an embedded microprocessor in
a smart card
can authenticate your computer usage and data. but 83 were ordered by
the Army Air Force. Ryan Aeronautical Company bought the Navion’s type
certificate in 1948. Sierra Hotel Aero bought the certificate from
Navion Aircraft Co. of Bowling Green, Ohio, said Gardner.
“I
loved the way it looked and how it flew. And at that time, the type
certificate happened to come up while I was getting things rolling to do
structural work and more modifications on the aircraft,” Gardner said.I
thought it would be fun to show you the inspiration behind the broken china-mosaics.
Since
receiving the type certificate, Sierra Hotel Aero has upgraded the fuel
system, said Gardner.you are involved every step of the way in creating
your own personalized bobbleheads.
“The FAA issued an airworthiness directive to replace the faulty fuel
selectors, which were worn out,” he said. “We immediately got a valve
design approved that was better than the original.”
Sierra Hotel
Aero has also upgraded the electrical system and is working on upgrades
to the powerplant, taking the engine from 185 horsepower to 310 hp,
said Gardner. “We’re also working on an STC for replacement
propellers,Service Report a problem with a street light.”
he said. “The original propellers are either obsolete or very expensive
to acquire. This will give owners more options to have newer
equipment.”
Navion owners can receive everything from minor
maintenance to complete factory rebuilds at Sierra Hotel Aero, said
Gardner. “We utilize the original factory fixtures and tooling, which
was part of the purchase of the type certificate,” he said.
“Everything
we’ve done with the existing fleet is a test plan that gives us the
basis to put out a new model airplane. We hold a Parts Manufacturer
Approval, and can build that into a production certificate, which will
lead to newer, more modern aircraft,” said Gardner. “We can take the
knowledge gleaned from the original fleet and design a new model as if
we’ve been the producer all along.”
Gardner estimates that
around 1,200 Navions are still flying worldwide. “More people are buying
them and fixing them up,Welcome to www.drycabinets.net!” he said. “We’ve heard about Navions recently in Australia, Switzerland, and Uruguay.
Navion
owners are devoted to their aircraft because of the way it flies and
handles, said Gardner. “Owners also love the way it looks and its
warbird heritage and it’s a very easy aircraft to fly,” he said. “It’s
very versatile and a workhorse.”
As we mull the Eagles of the
present and the future and gauge just how much re-tooling this roster
needs, Trent Cole's name as to be one of the most pressing at the top of
the list. He isn't just any ordinary player on this defense. Cole has
been a linchpin of production for years since the Eagles smartly used a
fifth-round draft pick on him and then developed him from a 235-pound
'tweener to a 270-pound rock of a man at right defensive end.
Cole's
rep, well earned, is one of a warrior on the football field who
exhausts every ounce of energy and effort on every play. He is in the
mold of former Eagle Hugh Douglas, a fighter on every play who finds a
way to beat his man -- often, in fact, two men -- on the path to the
quarterback.
Defensive ends, though, are a tricky breed to
project. We've seen it many times as the Eagles have used high draft
picks through the decades on defensive ends, only to see those players
achieve varying degrees of success. Cole is one who made it in the NFL
and stayed at a high level and now, as his ninth season waits in the
distance, is a huge, very important question mark that needs to be
answered the right way.
What if, the thinking goes from this
perspective, the Eagles want to move to a 3-4 defense from what they've
been running, the 4-3 front? Instead of putting his hand on the ground
and emerging from the snap of the ball from a three-point stance, Cole
would be asked to line up in space outside the tackle box as a rush
linebacker.
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