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Bill,
No, the plastic goes on the aft face of the canopy rollover just below
the place where the latching fingers hold down the canopy and where the extended
fingers would come in contact with the rollover when the canopy is
lowered. I will get some pix.
Grayhawk
In a message dated 4/30/2010 7:01:36 A.M. Central Daylight Time,
bbradburry@bellsouth.net writes:
Greyhawk,
Thanks for the
idea. I will have to look at it and see how it works. You are
saying to let the canopy down on the latch fingers with them extended.
If I place a piece of plastic under the bottom of the canopy, will it not
interfere with the complete closing of the canopy? I need to take a
closer look at it.
Bill B (you can call
me Baldeagle :>))
From:
Lancair Mailing List
[mailto:lml@lancaironline.net] On Behalf Of
Sky2high@aol.com Sent: Thursday, April 29, 2010 2:10
PM To:
lml@lancaironline.net Subject: [LML] Re: Legacy Canopy Hing
Cross-Tube
You will notice that
when the canopy is open and the latch fingers are extended, they
stick out. If you then carefully lower the canopy you will notice that
the fingers come in contact with the canopy rollover before the canopy
closes. OK, I can see the bulb light up...... If you attach a
plate to where the fingers come in contact with the rollover you can control
how far open you want the canopy up during taxi. On my 320 I use 3/16"
plastic plates affixed with double sided tape and that keeps my canopy open as
much as sticking my elbow under the side rail and with much less
pain.
PS Remember to
actually close and latch the canopy before
flight.
In a message dated
4/28/2010 3:51:57 P.M. Central Daylight Time, bbradburry@bellsouth.net
writes:
I took mine out,
but replaced it. The canopy is much more stable with it
in.
A question along
the same lines. The canopy is in danger of being removed from the
aircraft if you taxi with it up and get a sudden gust of tailwind, or turn
into a tailwind, etc.. What have others done to secure the canopy from
this danger? Has anyone invented a prop to hold the canopy open a
couple of inches for ventilation during taxi? If so, I would like to
see a picture.
Bill
B
From:
Lancair Mailing
List [mailto:lml@lancaironline.net] On Behalf Of
JPKleber@aol.com Sent: Wednesday, April 28, 2010 7:53
AM To:
lml@lancaironline.net Subject: [LML] Legacy Canopy Hing
Cross-Tube
I have been
contemplating whether or not to remove the canopy hinge cross tube. It
does get in the way of all the wiring and electronic gear on the avionics
shelf.
Any opinions on the
merits of the Canopy Hinge Cross-Tube? Is it necessary for canopy
stability (in winds)? Have you taken yours
out? or left it in?
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