PDA

View Full Version : LSA 2-place biplane - Sherwood Ranger



Eric Witherspoon
08-06-2011, 05:19 PM
Here's a link to the prior thread on this subject:
http://tinyurl.com/sherwood-thread

Just wanted to bring it up again here in case anyone else is interested. I'm building a Sherwood Ranger. 2-place, fuselage & tail is largely riveted aluminum structure with wood in the wings. If you want to find out more:

My site: http://spoonworld.com
Yahoo group: http://groups.yahoo.com/group/sherwoodbuilders/
Factory site: http://g-tlac.com

I'm not selling anything. Just a builder looking to connect with other builders and/or those that just might be interested in finding out more. Also, feel free to jump in if you've got any experiences with the type...

206

Eric Witherspoon
04-07-2012, 06:09 PM
After many months of making parts, starting to get some stuff attached together...
Center "box", to which all else attaches:
1797
Adding out forwards:
1798
Passenger seat mock up:
1799

Frank Giger
04-07-2012, 10:35 PM
Dead sexy airplane!

Please keep us updated!

Jim Clark
04-09-2012, 09:42 PM
Would love to get a LSA biplane to the National Biplane Fly In. http://www.nationalbiplaneflyin.com

Eric Witherspoon
05-03-2012, 06:39 PM
After another month or so, thinking, "man, that was a lot of tubes". And "Oh yeah. Now THAT's a lot of tubes..." Only hundreds more tubes to go where that came from...
Right side:1930
Forward looking aft:1932
Aft looking forwards:1931

malexander
05-04-2012, 03:49 AM
Is that all just riveted gussets, no welding?

dewi8095
05-04-2012, 06:20 AM
Would love to get a LSA biplane to the National Biplane Fly In. http://www.nationalbiplaneflyin.com

Jim, there has been one there for the last two years and hoping for a third if the weather is decent.

Don
Fisher Celebrity

1934

Eric Witherspoon
05-04-2012, 11:27 PM
Is that all just riveted gussets, no welding? Riveted or bolted. There are a few welded steel parts, but not many. Rudder pedals, a couple of landing gear parts, and the engine mount. Probably could come up with non-welded Al rudder pedals if you wanted to really minimize the welding.

paulgy80
07-25-2012, 02:37 PM
Hi Eric, looking very good.

We have been doing a lot of work since you purchased your plans. At this time we are working on gaining German approval at this time which is rigorous to say the least and we are testing the complete airframe including a ballistic recovery system. We have a new version which is aerobatic , it is a tow seater but for aero's we have limited it to single seat and we have made significant production changes to kits making them much faster build. Two new Fast Build kits are no on line and with the fast build option we alodine all of the components assembled, this offering outstanding corrosion resistance. We have invested in a large format CNC router which means more kit components are coming out finihed size with just fettling required by the builder.

Our motor offering has also increased we now support Jabiru 2200, Rotax 582, VW, BMW conversions, UL260i and soon we will be distributing and supporting D Motor, a motor we feel will be the next generation of lean burn reliable performance motors.

We are looking to have a US Distributor, if you know of anybody we would be interested to start discussions. It is fair to say that we are not the cheapest, we never will be bearing in mind the amount of engineering that goes into a kit and the amount of testing and support for builders we do offer genuine value for money and a guaranteed high quality finished aircraft.

Cheers

Paul

PS the U channel yu have between the FP5's is upside down, the open side should face upwards

Eric Witherspoon
10-02-2012, 11:51 AM
2542
2543
There you go, Al rudder pedals.

Paul - thanks for the comment on the channel at FP5. I'll check the figure and drop you an email - I believe it may be shown "U" or "n" in different figures.

Eric Witherspoon
11-15-2012, 09:40 PM
2639
2640
6 weeks from last posting, and here's the pilot's seat area. Still a lot of drilling & fitting to do, but the next big change will get really long, really quickly with the tail support structure.
2641

cluttonfred
11-16-2012, 03:46 AM
Neat project, Eric, I don't think there are many others in the USA. Is this a kit or are you building from plans?

Eric Witherspoon
11-16-2012, 10:05 AM
...I don't think there are many others in the USA. Is this a kit or are you building from plans?

I could not find any on the FAA registry currently. There was one in the U.S. in the mid 1990's - there are a couple of magazine articles around that time about it. I did find some on the U.K. registry, and there's probably a few flying in other countries.

I am working from plans so far, but they offer very complete kits and are adding more options all the time.

Eric Witherspoon
02-09-2013, 11:28 AM
2782
Ok, so I didn't get to the aft-of-cockpit tail structure yet, but decided to mock up the fuselage top.
Panels end up being pretty good size using a straight-across bulkhead approach. The factory offers a molded fiberglass part that covers all this - from firewall to aft of the aft cockpit. I'm trying to build it up from multiple pieces of sheet metal for a somewhat different shape.
2784
2783