TonyNZ wrote:
When I built my T18C 30 years ago I asked these questions of Lu and was told to treat the C wing limitations the same as the standard T18 ie +6 -4g @ 1250lb 9g ultimate. Unless the S18 wing is structurally different/beefed up I can not see how it can be legally aerobated at above 1250 lb. Perhaps the design engineer who did the calcs for the S18 wing could speak up rather than leave us all guessing?
Tony Schischka
T18C
ZK-VMS
Tony,
The design engineers, John Thorp, and then Lu Sunderland have both been gone for some time now, as you know of course. There has never been any statement from either one of them about -4 g's to my knowledge. It's always been +6 -3. Lu said the same to me as he did to you about treating the 2 wing designs the same... I could probably find the correspondence if I look. But he also said that the critical limit was due to the joints between inner & outer panels, the "weakest" link if you will. He stated that the new wing was good for +6 -3 @ 1500 lb. vs 1250 lb. for the "standard" wing. No "guessing" about this. I believe that John Thorp checked Lu's calculations. John also wrote to me about some "hidden" strength in the spar, but that is something usually found in most designs and should be treated as a sacred asset not to be spent. That belongs to the designer.
I mentioned an airplane that survived over 10 g's. Those were 2 very lucky people, one a good friend of mine. I don't want any of the new guys on this forum to think that an average T-18 can be abused like that & survive. Many of the "older" guys know the story. The airplane did not come out of it undamaged. I also saw an S18 doing aerobatics at a Thorp fly-in years ago that landed with wrinkled wing skins... very stupid.
The legality of doing aerobatics in airplanes with load limits less than +6 -3 g is another conversation. It's also illegal to do aerobatics without parachutes when carrying a passenger, when below 1500 AGL, etc., etc. Flying safely, and doing it legally are two different things not necessarily interdependent. I'm not advocating that anyone fly illegally.