After all this however, the
effort has finally rewarded him
with a truly spectacular and
speedy mount, which turns heads
wherever it appears!
Back to our flight - on being
about to clamber into the
Lancair cockpit, my first
surprise, amongst many yet to
come, was Dieter's request
(command?) to take off the
footwear - no shoes allowed to
sully the glacial surface of the
Lancair's wing, or the carpets
inside, for that matter. Having
chucked the Hush Puppies in the
back, we clambered in and
reclined on the astronaut's
couch (sorry pilot's seat, but
it is very laid back).
Once comfortably installed,
Dieter fired up the 0-320, 160
hp Lycoming, which runs very
smoothly and is quite well
insulated from the occupants in
terms of noise. Taxi was a
simple affair, as it should be
with the little wheel on the
front (I drive a similar
trolley, so I'm not making any
snide comments here, as some are
wont to do!). The Lancair rides
firmly on it's retractable gear,
with shock absorption taken care
of by rubber doughnuts in
compression.
Run-up was interesting, as if
you fail to observe a max. of
about 2000 rpm, you will find
yourself sliding in a cloud of
Goodyear rubber-smoke, over the
holding point, as the thrust
drags the aircraft, brakes
locked and tyres screaming
towards the nether regions of
the airfield.
Lining up and pouring on the
coals saw us scurry down the
bumpy Krugersdorp runway
exhibiting some serious
acceleration and after a very
short-lived impression of a
three-wheeled dragster, the
Lancair launched itself at the
sky. Sucking up the wheels
immediately after lift-off
Dieter started a climbing left
turn with about 1400 fpm and 120
kts showing and clearly this was
already getting to be fun!
Entering downwind, a call over
the radio told us that a King
Air joining just behind us
wanted to play and Dieter
obliged.
Throttling back to allow the
King-Air to catch up (no,
seriously!) we found ourselves
on final with the King-Air a few
hundred metres behind and going
hell - for leather to formate in
echelon right. The King Air
pilot, figuring he was about to
come steaming past, asked Dieter
to give it some welly and he
naturally obliged - by the time
we were over the threshold the
Lancair was clocking 240 kts
with the King Air finally in
formation!
Pulling up from the fly-by got
the VSI pegged at 2000 fpm, we
waved bye-bye to the King Air
and went off to play by
ourselves.
Flying the Lancair, after all
the bar talk everyone has heard
for so long about these "hot
ships" was a revelation - and a
contradiction of most of those
tales. It handles like a fast
flying machine should, crisp and
sensitive with powerful control
authority over each axis -
pitch, yaw and roll - and does
it travel!
At
2400 and 23 in MP we were
indicating 184 kts at 6800 amsl
! Cockpit comfort was excellent
with sufficient shoulder room in
the wide cockpit, plenty of leg
room and the previously
mentioned reclining seating
position. I expect that it would
be fine on a long trip, and
noise wasn't a problem, or at
least no more so than in any
light plane!
We
wore headsets and for years I
have adopted the practice of
wearing a decent headset, both
for noise suppression and much
improved communications inside
the aircraft and to the outside
world, and this makes a huge
difference to comfort on trips -
now if the headset manufacturers
can just figure a way to stop
their products clamping your
ears too tightly!
After a 25 minute burn around
the local area, I was looking
forward to the landing at HMS
Krugersdorp, as it is like
landing on an aircraft carrier
at this field and the Lancair is
reputedly a hot thing to land,
right! Yes and no - it comes in
fast, with 90 kts on approach,
but visibility over the nose is
fine and the aircraft is
perfectly stable - just fast.
We
landed just beyond the numbers
and were turning off by the
clubhouse (less than half the
useable runway) without having
to stand on the anchors - if it
had been necessary to get
stopped earlier that wouldn't
have been a problem.
As
a "time-machine" the Lancair 320
can offer some remarkable
travelling legs - Johannesburg
to Durban for instance in 1h15m,
and this speediness has seen the
Lancair place well in the State
President's Air Race several
times - as Dieter says, it's fun
to see the expression on their
faces in the Baron, as the
Lancair sneaks up and sails past
at close quarters during the
race!