To: realpatriot
Speaking of props, I sat in the propellor version of the BD-5 back in the late 70s. Fit like a glove and the control was a side stick. I had an AA5 Traveler (4 place, fixed gear), also designed by Jim Bede.
To: NewHampshireDuo
I was just a college kid, passing through, back in Jan. 74 when I sat in a prop version, minus the engine, in the Bede showroom at Newton, KS airport.
A customer was there that had purchased a BD-5 kit. Jim Bede gave us both a tour of the place, and a ride in a BD-4 (high wing, four place). He put it through some nice maneuvers. Compared to the Piper Tri-pacer I was accustomed to flying, the bird's handling and simple construction impressed me, but I never followed it's history. Maybe it wasn't as great a plane as it seemed to me at the time. Or maybe flying a C-310 occasionally in the years following helped put it out of my mind. But the BD-5J must be a thrill ride like no other.
17 posted on
05/15/2006 7:51:48 PM PDT by
Zuriel
(Acts 2:38,39....nearly 2,000 years and still working today!)
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