It may sound expensive but it’s not . I had a glider costing almost as much.It’s absolutely a beast for the money,speed, range , electronics, safety parachute and the way it looks 😮I need one asap😮
Yes, learning to fly gets expensive as is renting or buying an aircraft after you get your license. I took lessons many years ago in a piper tomahawk and ran out of funds to continue after 12 hours. The title says "YOU CAN FLY THIS from just 31 hours training from ZERO" and I'm not sure what that means. FAA regulations require a minimum of 40 hours, some people are ready to solo before that and others need more time. But I'm pretty sure you can't solo and get the license at 31 hrs not even if you're Chuck Yeager! There could be people that are so talented at it that they COULD solo at 20 hours but regulations are regulations.
@@minerran i am talking about the cost of this plane. Not talking about the cost of learning to fly. I fly from 16th i am 42 . I had different gliders and older planes but this one as a new plane with the electronics and all performance its a bargain
@@MADTASS I just did the math, 142 miles / 2.9 gallons = 49 MPH. That puts it up in Toyota Prius territory. Of course, it has half the passenger and cargo capacity but will get you there 2 to 3 faster.
How amazing is that aircraft? What an incredible and approachable light plane. A recreational craft that doesn't sell you short on speed and distance. Just perfect in every way.
A good ziplock bag with a large cup of kitty litter can't spill the way a bottle can. But I think you can still install a pilot relief tube, can't you?
I love Little Snoring. I did a precautionary landing there once. Great place to practice x-winds. Some students may be ready in the time stated others may take longer. The faster speeds will be taught in the Nav groundschool. Times will be taught in proportion to the TAS and ground speed, so instead of trundling along at 98 kts, +or- the wind, your doing 160kts. So, stating that students will or will not be ready in the quoted times is like asking how long is a piece of string. And, if the student fails to demonstrate the required competence in any particular skill during the test, then they would have to be trained up to the required standard in order to pass the test. It's not a case of being ready in a certain amount of time, it's a case of having the competence to pass the test. So, it's horses for courses either they will complete their training in those times, or they won't.
While flying Shark aircraft siblings Zara and Matt Rutherford each separately broke the Guinness Book of World Records as the youngest teenage pilots to circumnavigate the globe. Zara was only 19 and Matt was only 17 when they accomplished this amazing feat!!
Age is not the question, they both had a lot more of 30 hours and are professional pilots. I became a helicopter commercial pilot and flight instructor at age 19 as well.
@Ozbird-72 Obviously, the Rutherfords had loads of experience just being around aircraft their whole lives. I just think the Shark is a very cool and capable aircraft design, and that's why they chose it for the record.
Those records are meaningless nowadays. That just means their parents have lots of money for them to blew getting records. Airplanes are more reliable and navigation , with GPS are no longer an issue. None of this flying around the Pacific wondering where Howland Island is, to my right or left or did I passed it. You know your position within 10 ft . In other places, they have young guys doing much more dangerous things , like being soldiers in wars and running drugs. Under age kids are preferred because the law exempt them from serious charges. It is actually easier for a teenager to do records, for ocean crossings, Lax to Hawaii is the longest , for a small plane it be 12 hours + and older pilots cannot make that without a washroom in the plane. For that, you need something like a King Air or a PC12.
Nice one Terry. Looks like you had fun. It truly is an amazing aircraft. We are blessed to have all these amazing machines now in the microlight category. These can easily meet 90% of UK pilot missions and hopefully will inspire more people to take up aviation.
Fantastic compilation, very detailed thank you. I am one of those looking to get into this in my later years as now I am retired and looking for additional ways to keep myself amused without drowning in rules and regulations. Had thought about originally in my younger years via commercial however took a detour in the military turning wrenches for 30+ years instead. Sights currently in the helo direction and will tie in IFR ratings as a bonus to cover all bases. May just have to pay you guys a visit there one day very soon. Again thank you...Happy flying!!
Lots of people in here are getting very het up about the fact someone fresh out of training for their NPPL could fly this! I guarantee you it’s a lot safer than a new PPL holder going out and buying a Cirrus as their first aircraft! They are also forgetting the instructor element - no instructor is going to sign someone off as competent to fly this aircraft unless they demonstrate that they are indeed just that! It could take 5 hours, it could take 10. The level of licence you hold is absolutely irrelevant! It comes down to an individuals skill and capacity to learn. That aside - it was an excellent video Terry 👏
That's a lovely sentiment but a bit like saying a 250c motorbike is less dangerous than a 750cc one, or a modern one easier to handle than a vintage one . Whilst there might be some truth in that, if you come off going around a bend and hit a tree, because you didn't factor in Autumn, trees and the possibility of slippery fallen leaves, it won't matter much which bike you are on. And it will have happened because (perhaps while being too involved in just riding that bike) your intuitions ('what if', 'eventualities', the essence of good/safe piloting) were not good enough. Experience matters here. And of course skill and capacity to learn are important. But, as that old wisdom about aviating says: unlike driving a car or sailing a boat, flying is very unforgiving of mistakes. So you can get killed before you get to learn what not to do. I am a (surviving) glider pilot, in case credentials are relevant. I actually completed by Silver badge with about 15hrs from starting flying. But I never, ever deluded myself that this made me a pilot fit to fly in conditions other than those I was familiar with. You need relevant instruction and experience before you allow yourself to believe that.
Another good video Terry thank you. I think you may stay with your Sport cruiser and I will stay with my Skyranger. I’m sure the Shark is faultless but cost will take it away from the majority of microlight pilots. 👍
Anyone with the mindset that all they need to do to fly this thing is qualify with minimum hours/training is living in dreamland.. but don't worry, you won't be living there for long.
If a prospective pilot is flying 2 hours a week, he will never get there. If he's flying 25 hours a week, he could probably do a complete certificate in 2 weeks.
@@DumbledoreMcCracken And that's the mistake many dead pilots have made in the past. It's not simply about certification. it's about experience.. this plane is fast... fast enough to get people into trouble much quicker.. It's complex, so when things are going pear-shaped it's more complicated to find a way to deal with the problems.. inexperience will bite.
Watch "pilot debrief" with Hoover and get to see whats happens when hubris meets General Aviation. Plus, not all people will train at the same rate - guaranteeing something in 31 hours is simply impossible. Videos like this are going to get real people killed.
@@jamesgraham6122 even though I’m not a pilot, I watch a lot of these videos and can see exactly where you’re coming from. Watched enough UA-cam videos on passed pilots, particularly those who bought machines that were too advanced for them, I learned about the phrase “being behind the plane” and what it means. Even I can safely fly a Cessna 172 and land it literally in any situation (on Microsoft Flight Simulator!).
Wow! What a privilege to be asked to review it 😮 Well done Terry, I’m glad you enjoyed it, and produced an excellent review of a beautiful small plane 👌👍👏👏
I want to say I absolutely love you're videos. You have been the soul reason that I got the motivation and courage to dive back into trying to become a pilot full time. I struggled with F.U.D. for the past year after flying my first few hours and realizing I want to change careers and become a commercial pilot. I have had so much motivation and positivity about making it happen since I watch one of your videos a few months ago. Again here I am watching another video and you're doing nothing but showing me that it's possible. Thank you so much! I'm going to owe you so much the day I become a commercial pilot!
I started in an "Ultralight", here in the USA. 254 pounds in weight empty/dry, max 54 knots. NO license at all needed. Flew my Maxair drifter over 90 hours. I had 4 hours of dual instruction in a Cessna 150 when I soloed my ultralight. I even looped it. The loop happened at a fly-in where we were mock dog fighting. I couldn't shake this trike turning so I decided to use my superior speed (i might have replaced the stock 28 hp engine with a 60 hp) get out in front of him and then pull hard around to get "guns" on him. I actually climbed and turned, looking over my shoulder. It was more of a cork screw than a loop but I did get my shot on him, coming over the top upside down. 3 engine outs, an accidental loop and I took it down for IRAN. It was close to coming apart in key areas! The "Micro Light" is way more airplane. I would have died trying to learn to fly in a Shark. I am 69 now, so getting in that hot rod would test my limits...
It sounds like you fly your airplane "beyond it's capabilities" too see if you can make it do what you want it to do not what it's supose to do and that makes you a very stupid pilot.
I have no idea why UA-cam recommended me to this video, I’m not a pilot and don’t watch aviation channels but that might change now! Beautiful aircraft and great review, I just have to decide what colour I’d have mine in now 😂
"It looks like a shark! It moves like a shark, It must be an Air Shark." 👍 ~I love the introduction of the emergency fuselage Parachute system(It is a marketing advantage due to sales when it is noted to the attention of all potential candidates), and the compacted construction of the aircraft. The 55 knot takeoff release is a plus, and? The Rotax adds to the spice.~ "Good Job on the completion of this aircraft; Congratulations on an item that is wanted by many, it is needed. I like the small size of the item, it is compatible Due to storage and low maintenance review once evaluated regularly."
Not as slippery as this Shark, but was sighned off on a ARROW & SARATOGA as a student pilot. Got my license at 41.5 hours. Not typical but some can handle this craft under 100hrs. Pitch & power & never forget, A AIRCRAFT CAN STALL AT ANY SPEED & ANY ATTITUDE!
5:18 ... can't explain, but it's the first time that I watch an aircraft onboard footage and feel claustrophobic. Not even inside real aircraft I ever felt this way
I'd say you're going to need at least 60-80 hours of training to be able to handle the performance of that aircraft. Most pilots with a Sport Pilot's license will likely need closer to 100 hours. That's a complex high performance aircraft, which could get people in serious trouble if they get behind the aircraft. You'd need to be thinking at 160 knots, not 100 knots, like most light training aircraft, so you'd need to be on your game to handle that thing with less than 80 hours in your log book. Some PPL license holders have both an HP and complex endorsement at less than 100 hours, but that's more the exception than the rule. If you were training pretty constantly, it could be done, but you'd need to be flying at least a few times a week to get it done in low hours.
Since this is a low requirement, cheap to buy and maintain plane, and very fuel economical, people will fly those hours. If you add complex license fees, extra expensive training hours, add expenses here and there, no-one will. Sure all those people in the system, all those gears will be greased, but noone will fly those hours, the system can get costs super high if they want to. That's what you're asking? In the name of "safety"? Either you are a gear in the system, an instructor or something, and you want more monies, or you're one of those exclusivity rich, you got the monies for it, you don't want anyone else in on it. So yeah, let go of those safety fairytales. People have launched themselves on rockets, flown with their sofa tied to balloons, gimme a break with your safety BS richman.
In USA we will have to wait until the MOSAIC rule come into effect. But the completion is big and will come down to who can offer the most for the money.
Great review terry! Sounds like you had a blast! Very informative review the plane. Ive seen several on this plane. But none, quite as thorough as yours. 👍🏽
@@skyboy1956 Even the BBC call planes "aircrafts" now, in their news articles. I truly despair for this country. Edit: I think this country is full of sheeps who don't know how to spell
wonderful review, thank. it would be great to have some acrobatic capability but, for the intended audience/customer, it seems awesome. would love to get a ride in her.
Hi Terry, I've only just had a chance to see this video, what a fab little aircraft. Sadly, now that HMG has chopped my winter fuel payment I don't think I'll be ordering one any time soon🙄 Oh well, back to MSFS😉 Stay safe🙃🙂
I’m a former hang glider and want something I can fly from a pasture in the evening for 30-40 minutes in my neighborhood. I don’t have to worry about restricted air or airports. I’m thinking about a powered ultralight. I hope I can find instruction and sales near central Arkansas.
Ok people, a bit of a relaity check from somone who knows what thay are talking about. I am a Flight Instructor with 5000 hrs dual given. I have sent about 700+ student pilots on their 'First Solo". Of the 3000 different students I have trained, only 1 or 2 of them would be able to handle an aircraft of this performance level with 31 hrs of flight training experience. A very good student would be at least 150 hrs before they can even start training in this aircraft.
Thanks for posting this. It looks like a heck of a lot of fun, but it's not exactly a C-152! .if you get low, slow, uncoordinated, and stall on a base to the final turn, just pull the chute. - maybe not!
I agree with your general aviation 31hr assessment, but not the 1 or 2 out of 3000. Apples to pears I know, but I sent quite a number solo in high performance military trainers at the 8-10 hrs mark. Outside of bashing the circuit, these students were later flying solo IFR/Aerobatics/Low level/ Formation [not all at the same time!] at much less than 150hrs total. Just sayin'
@@spdaltidyou are correct. His numbers don’t add up at all. I was an instructor for 1500 hours. Majority of my students would solo in less than 20 hours. And most could handle an aircraft like this rather quickly.
@@ShortField I might of skipped over your mentioning any fees for flight time cost for being checked out or if there is any checkout to fly it away for certificated pilots.
Iam lucky enough to have had a flight in G-MAKO. Its a very impressive aircraft, ultra fast and has very nice easy handling although I think its too complicated an aircraft to fly with only thirty odd hours training from scratch. I really enjoyed flying it but you do lose some of the STOL characteristics of other more affordable microlights and the amount of pitch up you need to slow the thing down is incredible. It is also pretty awkward to get in and out of even for someone young and flexible like me. Its a great plane but you can buy a lot of GA aircraft performance for less than a third of the price.
No ones going to be in this in 31 hours, however it's a great selling point. I don't know what you think but to me this is not really a practical aircraft for touring as although there's that massive range you'd be hard pressed to fly anywhere in Europe for 10 hours VFR.
@@ShortField This is the bottom line issue... I find it incredibly strange that there are RVs etc that are Night and IFR approved to fly under permit from the LAA .. but this £250,000 brand new airplane isn't.
Nice airplane! Well done. But this would be a killer for the average zero time trainee. This clip is hopefully not aiming for the below average enthusiast... living in fantasy land. If you really expect to fly this almost "high performance" airplane after 31 hours... (from pedestrian to pilot) you need to train with the airforce. In other words: You have to be qualified and selected ! Regards from the 747 cockpit ✈ (fmr P-51 , T-6, PC-7 jockey and instructor on other airplanes, 747, 737). But I have to admit: The clickbait worked pretty well.. 😉 And, more importantly: It's a very cool airplane ! Good luck with it. .
In Australia this would have VH Reg. and you'd need a PPL... A Rec Aviation license wouldn't be sufficient due to the speed and the retractable gears....
I really don't like our licensing system over here, having met a few NPPL and LAPL license holders here in the UK (a few not all obviously), their lack of knowledge and proficiency scares me! Modern Microlights are much faster and can be way more complicated than your basic Cessna 152 but you need LESS training?! I'm glad the 6 hour conversion for the Shark is mandatory. The medical requirements are a joke, how many elderly drivers really shouldn't be on the road let alone in the sky, self certification is dangerous.
Don't ya just love getting someone awesome in the tower. Now if only I could afford to get one of those planes here in the US. I had to give up my training when dad sold his plane.
This looks like an RC model I used to fly from Multiplex! And it was called the Shark, but I had no idea it was based on a full size. One difference, it was a pusher prop.
Ease of flying (controlling) the aircraft is only one aspect to becoming a pilot. You've also got to learn procedures, absorb a lot of info the FAA will test you on, learn airport operations, airport layouts, navigation by air and a big one - learning how to talk to ATC and follow correctly their instructions.
Truly a lovely looking aircraft. Seems economical to run as well, or would be if avgas was cheaper. I wonder how these will depreciate over time? I know older planes like Cherokees can be had for a fraction of the cost. However, I think flying is always going to be expensive, and a pipe dream for most
N36LV builder here. With respect, I completely disagree. This is not a Lancair 4 with a very unforgiving wing below 70kts. 160kts true means 130kts indicated around 10,000ft. With that excellent visibility and 40mph stall speed this looks like a slightly quicker version of the original Diamond Katana. One of the most memorably easiest airplanes to fly, especially in the landing phase. I applaud their efforts at fuel efficiency and cockpit design. Probably a big baby to fly….I want one!
Flown around the world safely once by a 19 year old girl and then by her brother who was 17. It's really easy to fly but things happen quickly at 150 knots. Thank you great comment.
Only that after decades of flying aging Pipers and Cessnas, it was the most refreshing new design (at the time) which sipped fuel, had a reasonable cruise speed and was without peer the easiest plane to fly near the runway environment and into ground effect (my Velocity notwithstanding).
Gotta love it, “they thought of everything”. A viewing window in the wing with a vertical viewing angle is useless unless your already on the ground. And lets face it for 300k you can get a lot of quality and time proven aircraft, insane licence conditions or not
All the instructors dropping in their qualifications suggesting a 100hp aircraft is high perfomance.. low stall speed and a same HP as a Cessna 152 Suggest it's actually safer than a c152
Seems some 'instructors' on here want to puff up their self importance. I had one instructor many years ago, that made it really hard for students just to bump up his $$$$. Most of his students eventually moved to other instructors or quit. Guess what? All the students who certified with other instructors are still alive.
@@tonylam9548 but this has a lower stall speed than a 152. Where is there any evidence that's it's any harder than that to fly .. yes it goes faster but it lands slower which is where most accidents happen in the pattern ..
@@PILOTCIRRUSASIA I don't know, it might be easier, the thing is, this is a much faster and looks like an agile plane. Inexperienced people might have issues in managing speed or they might get carried away and do stuff they shouldn't and maybe they wouldn't try at all in a slow moving truck like chesna. This is obviously a better plane, and in certain respects, safer - I bet it's a better glider than a C152/172 for one. So I don't know... noone is gonna complain for the minimal requirements or the price, if instructors are complaining, maybe they should train properly for this type of aircraft. They too might complain cause they wanna justify more hours of training, who knows. I think they should certify this plane for spins and abnormal departures, cause it's a plane where you wanna do things, it's best if the plane can actually do them and the airframe can cope. Then again, people will need to be trained on those as well. Is this in an UL license? It should be, I don't know. It's a far better plane, progress is progress, better materials, aerodynamics, better engine, cheaper, it's a plane, it carries risks, people will need to do their own homework as well, not totally based on instructors. I'm not a "safety" person really. At least not the UK kind of "safety". If you need a license to climb stairs or go over a gap, maybe you shouldn't be flying planes at all. Let others do it. The UK got the money for the expensive type training and old expensive "elevator" (LOL) type planes, maybe this isn't for the UK market.
@@ShortField I'll bet!! Had ~10 hours fuel in my Commanche across 6 tanks and my longest single hop was 8 hours. That was certainly enough for personal endurance in anyone's book 🙂
i think it can be done, with a good intensive training program. it's not for the average student flying 2 or 3 times a week. but a structured program flying the way military trains, 31 hours is very reasonable
Interesting aircraft, reminds me a bit of the Embraer Tucano trainer and it appears they've been used for circumnavigations already which is quite impressive.
That's the part that worries me the most about this, not how few hours you need to be able to fly it. I suspect that a number of people who self declare because they "don't need a medical" would probably fail a medical. And they know it. I work in the classic car business and some of the MOT exempt cars I've seen out in the wild would be flagged as dangerous if they ever went near an MOT bay.
They're remarkable little aircraft, very nice (at a price🤔). I think that a fixed gear version would be useful too. I'd like to see something similar, but side by side. I'm also wondering with small ailerons what the crosswind capability is. And, in the 600kg category, why no step under the wing to help access and egress.
They start from as little as 240,000 euros for a basic version :-) I think the extra weight and drag from fixed gear (the retracts have a lot of Carbon Fibre in them and have a low operation speed of 70 knots) would make them a bit of a waste of time.
@@ShortField Hi Terry, I'll sell a body part or two🤫🤫😲😲🤭🤭 Understood re the undercart now, it's just one more thing to service, to go wrong, adds complexity, moves away from LSA/Microlight K.I.S.S ethos. It's a fancy thing to have though, makes the aeroplane very slippery too👍😊 Trailing link retracts can be a double edged sword though - at times too 'soft'🤔 Swings and roundabouts I guess.
@@hugostiglitz6914 If the medical isn't an issue, and one invests a little more in training, then good second hand, aircraft, with similar capabilities can be had for less money in the PPL type categories🤔🤔
@@musoseven8218 You'd be hard pressed to find an aircraft with the same short field performance, the same fuel consumption and the same cruise speed and the same avionics. Also the maintenance requirements. It says in the upload, it's probably aimed at people with money who wouldn't pass the medical. Some people like their toys new.
I'm not a pilot, not likely ever to be one, but I am interested somewhat in flying and planes (for some strange reason!) - love watching your content. Hope to meet you one day so you can buy me a coffee :)
Terry, do you realise that you've accidentally given birth to Top Gear for the skies?! Great aircraft! I just wish microlight category planes could be IFR certified. Does it have the relevant Nav radios?
Flying well is not a simple and easy set of skills. It is not. An overactive imagination, blind passion and overexcitement can easily get you very quickly out of the walking alive group. Flying a "low and slow" ultralight is very achievable if you are not reckless and impulsive, follow rules and watch and totally respect and avoid the weather that is beyond yours and the aircraft's limitations. With high performance, fast planes the whole game drastically changes for the worse, and that's why even very experienced pilots who become overconfident in those planes leave this world way too early. Get into the thousands of hours of disciplined flight on a slower plane before you get a plane like the one here. Love aviation? Love yourself way more!!
I never once said they were in effect, I said once MOSAIC is here they will be available to sport pilots. Please let me know if you heard different and tell me where in the video I said that and I'll change it.
Can you get permanent landing gear for tundra tires possible optional tail dragger edition and float option ... im impressed with the shark curious about landing gear options now
It may sound expensive but it’s not . I had a glider costing almost as much.It’s absolutely a beast for the money,speed, range , electronics, safety parachute and the way it looks 😮I need one asap😮
Yes, learning to fly gets expensive as is renting or buying an aircraft after you get your license. I took lessons many years ago in a piper tomahawk and ran out of funds to continue after 12 hours. The title says "YOU CAN FLY THIS from just 31 hours training from ZERO" and I'm not sure what that means. FAA regulations require a minimum of 40 hours, some people are ready to solo before that and others need more time. But I'm pretty sure you can't solo and get the license at 31 hrs not even if you're Chuck Yeager! There could be people that are so talented at it that they COULD solo at 20 hours but regulations are regulations.
@@minerran i am talking about the cost of this plane. Not talking about the cost of learning to fly. I fly from 16th i am 42 . I had different gliders and older planes but this one as a new plane with the electronics and all performance its a bargain
@@minerran The FAA is in the USA. This video is talking about regulations in the UK.
And at 11 Litres an Hour at a Speed of 124 Knots It's Cheaper to Run than Some Cars.
@@MADTASS I just did the math, 142 miles / 2.9 gallons = 49 MPH. That puts it up in Toyota Prius territory. Of course, it has half the passenger and cargo capacity but will get you there 2 to 3 faster.
How amazing is that aircraft? What an incredible and approachable light plane. A recreational craft that doesn't sell you short on speed and distance. Just perfect in every way.
Love the friendly ATC conversation!
No heels on my wings!!! Epic little bird. Thanks for sharing. Still prefer the RV though... especially cost wise.
Want one. (Lapsed PPL, not flown for about 20 years but sorely tempted.)
Exactly same as me, started to regain mine.
Lovely to see the controller enjoying your content on UA-cam and chatting to you in flight! Great community, aviation! :)
'A bladder busting 11.6 hours' so true!
Always carry the special bottle just for that emergency.
@@rinzler9775 When you're bursting every bottle become special.
A good ziplock bag with a large cup of kitty litter can't spill the way a bottle can. But I think you can still install a pilot relief tube, can't you?
Gear UP and locked? That would be a RED led in my mind.
@@lyfandeth Well, I do belive it's because everything is normal/nominal? green good. red bad?
I love Little Snoring. I did a precautionary landing there once. Great place to practice x-winds.
Some students may be ready in the time stated others may take longer. The faster speeds will be taught in the Nav groundschool.
Times will be taught in proportion to the TAS and ground speed, so instead of trundling along at 98 kts, +or- the wind, your doing 160kts.
So, stating that students will or will not be ready in the quoted times is like asking how long is a piece of string.
And, if the student fails to demonstrate the required competence in any particular skill during the test, then they would have to be trained up to the required standard in order to pass the test. It's not a case of being ready in a certain amount of time, it's a case of having the competence to pass the test.
So, it's horses for courses either they will complete their training in those times, or they won't.
Great comment.
amazing engineering , these guys are awesome , thank you for sharing.
While flying Shark aircraft siblings Zara and Matt Rutherford each separately broke the Guinness Book of World Records as the youngest teenage pilots to circumnavigate the globe. Zara was only 19 and Matt was only 17 when they accomplished this amazing feat!!
Age is not the question, they both had a lot more of 30 hours and are professional pilots. I became a helicopter commercial pilot and flight instructor at age 19 as well.
@Ozbird-72 Obviously, the Rutherfords had loads of experience just being around aircraft their whole lives. I just think the Shark is a very cool and capable aircraft design, and that's why they chose it for the record.
Those records are meaningless nowadays. That just means their parents have lots of money for them to blew getting records. Airplanes are more reliable and navigation , with GPS are no longer an issue. None of this flying around the Pacific wondering where Howland Island is, to my right or left or did I passed it. You know your position within 10 ft . In other places, they have young guys doing much more dangerous things , like being soldiers in wars and running drugs. Under age kids are preferred because the law exempt them from serious charges. It is actually easier for a teenager to do records, for ocean crossings, Lax to Hawaii is the longest , for a small plane it be 12 hours + and older pilots cannot make that without a washroom in the plane. For that, you need something like a King Air or a PC12.
They mention the record on the website but don't link to it or show any information. Well done to them.
Can you get golf clubs in it?
Green light for gear up would take some logic change.
😂
Sweet looking rocket!!
Had a chat with Stuart at Sleapfest while drooling over G-MAKO. Lovely thing, just need a lottery win!
That's a beautiful little aircraft. Wish I could own one!!!
Gorgeous aircraft!
A future star of Dan Gryders DTSB channel .
This plane is beautiful.
Nice one Terry. Looks like you had fun. It truly is an amazing aircraft. We are blessed to have all these amazing machines now in the microlight category. These can easily meet 90% of UK pilot missions and hopefully will inspire more people to take up aviation.
It sure is and I'll have to have a good look at your offering as well Ash.
Fantastic compilation, very detailed thank you. I am one of those looking to get into this in my later years as now I am retired and looking for additional ways to keep myself amused without drowning in rules and regulations. Had thought about originally in my younger years via commercial however took a detour in the military turning wrenches for 30+ years instead. Sights currently in the helo direction and will tie in IFR ratings as a bonus to cover all bases. May just have to pay you guys a visit there one day very soon. Again thank you...Happy flying!!
@@VeRSINGOnTheGo look me up if you do come over 👍
OMG, my most favourite UA-camr and my most favourite plane has come together. Sipping a G&T while watching.
Amazing thanks so much for the kind words and support Bjorn.
Lots of people in here are getting very het up about the fact someone fresh out of training for their NPPL could fly this! I guarantee you it’s a lot safer than a new PPL holder going out and buying a Cirrus as their first aircraft! They are also forgetting the instructor element - no instructor is going to sign someone off as competent to fly this aircraft unless they demonstrate that they are indeed just that! It could take 5 hours, it could take 10. The level of licence you hold is absolutely irrelevant! It comes down to an individuals skill and capacity to learn.
That aside - it was an excellent video Terry 👏
Thanks Nick nicely put comment.
Went straight into a Cirrus after my initial FAA PPL in a c182T now 1,000hrs
That's a lovely sentiment but a bit like saying a 250c motorbike is less dangerous than a 750cc one, or a modern one easier to handle than a vintage one . Whilst there might be some truth in that, if you come off going around a bend and hit a tree, because you didn't factor in Autumn, trees and the possibility of slippery fallen leaves, it won't matter much which bike you are on. And it will have happened because (perhaps while being too involved in just riding that bike) your intuitions ('what if', 'eventualities', the essence of good/safe piloting) were not good enough. Experience matters here. And of course skill and capacity to learn are important. But, as that old wisdom about aviating says: unlike driving a car or sailing a boat, flying is very unforgiving of mistakes. So you can get killed before you get to learn what not to do. I am a (surviving) glider pilot, in case credentials are relevant. I actually completed by Silver badge with about 15hrs from starting flying. But I never, ever deluded myself that this made me a pilot fit to fly in conditions other than those I was familiar with. You need relevant instruction and experience before you allow yourself to believe that.
Another good video Terry thank you. I think you may stay with your Sport cruiser and I will stay with my Skyranger. I’m sure the Shark is faultless but cost will take it away from the majority of microlight pilots. 👍
Anyone with the mindset that all they need to do to fly this thing is qualify with minimum hours/training is living in dreamland.. but don't worry, you won't be living there for long.
If a prospective pilot is flying 2 hours a week, he will never get there. If he's flying 25 hours a week, he could probably do a complete certificate in 2 weeks.
@@DumbledoreMcCracken And that's the mistake many dead pilots have made in the past. It's not simply about certification. it's about experience.. this plane is fast... fast enough to get people into trouble much quicker.. It's complex, so when things are going pear-shaped it's more complicated to find a way to deal with the problems.. inexperience will bite.
@@jamesgraham6122 I am a glider pilot, maybe I just put more into my learning than the average bumble.
Watch "pilot debrief" with Hoover and get to see whats happens when hubris meets General Aviation. Plus, not all people will train at the same rate - guaranteeing something in 31 hours is simply impossible. Videos like this are going to get real people killed.
@@jamesgraham6122 even though I’m not a pilot, I watch a lot of these videos and can see exactly where you’re coming from. Watched enough UA-cam videos on passed pilots, particularly those who bought machines that were too advanced for them, I learned about the phrase “being behind the plane” and what it means. Even I can safely fly a Cessna 172 and land it literally in any situation (on Microsoft Flight Simulator!).
Wow looks like a dream machine for fun flying.
Wow! What a privilege to be asked to review it 😮
Well done Terry, I’m glad you enjoyed it, and produced an excellent review of a beautiful small plane 👌👍👏👏
Thanks Kev it was a brilliant day and the team there were very accommodating.
I have flown this magnificent bird in Slovakia.
A very attractive airplane. I could definitely see myself owning one.
I want to say I absolutely love you're videos. You have been the soul reason that I got the motivation and courage to dive back into trying to become a pilot full time. I struggled with F.U.D. for the past year after flying my first few hours and realizing I want to change careers and become a commercial pilot. I have had so much motivation and positivity about making it happen since I watch one of your videos a few months ago. Again here I am watching another video and you're doing nothing but showing me that it's possible. Thank you so much! I'm going to owe you so much the day I become a commercial pilot!
So sorry for the late reply thank you so much, go follow that dream.
I started in an "Ultralight", here in the USA. 254 pounds in weight empty/dry, max 54 knots. NO license at all needed. Flew my Maxair drifter over 90 hours. I had 4 hours of dual instruction in a Cessna 150 when I soloed my ultralight. I even looped it. The loop happened at a fly-in where we were mock dog fighting. I couldn't shake this trike turning so I decided to use my superior speed (i might have replaced the stock 28 hp engine with a 60 hp) get out in front of him and then pull hard around to get "guns" on him. I actually climbed and turned, looking over my shoulder. It was more of a cork screw than a loop but I did get my shot on him, coming over the top upside down. 3 engine outs, an accidental loop and I took it down for IRAN. It was close to coming apart in key areas! The "Micro Light" is way more airplane. I would have died trying to learn to fly in a Shark. I am 69 now, so getting in that hot rod would test my limits...
I would be careful snap that airframe putting too much stress on it. Ultralights are designed for slow flight and low G force.
Ultralight has different definitions in the US and Europe...
+4 -2G same as pretty much every non-aero aircraft on the market.
@@Mike-01234 look at the Maxair Drifter design. It is like a Heath parasol monoplane. Cables on top and bottom of the wing. Probably why I am alive...
It sounds like you fly your airplane "beyond it's capabilities" too see if you can make it do what you want it to do not what it's supose to do and that makes you a very stupid pilot.
Superb photography, some of the best I’ve seen.
I have no idea why UA-cam recommended me to this video, I’m not a pilot and don’t watch aviation channels but that might change now! Beautiful aircraft and great review, I just have to decide what colour I’d have mine in now 😂
Welcome aboard Captain! :-)
"It looks like a shark! It moves like a shark, It must be an Air Shark." 👍
~I love the introduction of the emergency fuselage Parachute system(It is a marketing advantage due to sales when it is noted to the attention of all potential candidates), and the compacted construction of the aircraft. The 55 knot takeoff release is a plus, and? The Rotax adds to the spice.~
"Good Job on the completion of this aircraft; Congratulations on an item that is wanted by many, it is needed. I like the small size of the item, it is compatible Due to storage and low maintenance review once evaluated regularly."
I would change that gear LED to red, as convention is, gear down three Green to confirm down and locked.
Not as slippery as this Shark, but was sighned off on a ARROW & SARATOGA as a student pilot. Got my license at 41.5 hours. Not typical but some can handle this craft under 100hrs. Pitch & power & never forget, A AIRCRAFT CAN STALL AT ANY SPEED & ANY ATTITUDE!
5:18 ... can't explain, but it's the first time that I watch an aircraft onboard footage and feel claustrophobic. Not even inside real aircraft I ever felt this way
Thanks Terry Enjoyed that! What a great aircraft
Many thanks James.
33kn stall speed ?? holy crabola.......that's impressive.
woah....
I'd say you're going to need at least 60-80 hours of training to be able to handle the performance of that aircraft. Most pilots with a Sport Pilot's license will likely need closer to 100 hours. That's a complex high performance aircraft, which could get people in serious trouble if they get behind the aircraft. You'd need to be thinking at 160 knots, not 100 knots, like most light training aircraft, so you'd need to be on your game to handle that thing with less than 80 hours in your log book. Some PPL license holders have both an HP and complex endorsement at less than 100 hours, but that's more the exception than the rule. If you were training pretty constantly, it could be done, but you'd need to be flying at least a few times a week to get it done in low hours.
Since this is a low requirement, cheap to buy and maintain plane, and very fuel economical, people will fly those hours. If you add complex license fees, extra expensive training hours, add expenses here and there, no-one will. Sure all those people in the system, all those gears will be greased, but noone will fly those hours, the system can get costs super high if they want to. That's what you're asking? In the name of "safety"? Either you are a gear in the system, an instructor or something, and you want more monies, or you're one of those exclusivity rich, you got the monies for it, you don't want anyone else in on it. So yeah, let go of those safety fairytales. People have launched themselves on rockets, flown with their sofa tied to balloons, gimme a break with your safety BS richman.
The field of vision on this aircraft is awesome!
Sweet aircraft. Simulator would be nice. Have a acrobatic instructor ride along with you.
in the Netherlands there is a militairy air base traning center they use 3 of this , sharks ,1of was in belgium this weekend , at a air show ,
A wonderful air craft, wish I could afford one, maybe in a few years! By that I it may be available in the US. Safe skies to all!
Despite the warnings it looks like a really beautiful aircraft with amazing range. Shame its not certified for IMC.
Your channel just came up on my "recommended" list. Great video. You just got a new subscriber. Can't wait to see more of your video's. Thanks.
Awesome! Thank you!
In USA we will have to wait until the MOSAIC rule come into effect. But the completion is big and will come down to who can offer the most for the money.
Typo: competition instead of completion
Maybe the MOSAIC will make something like the An2 or PC12 classify as "light sport?"
Great review terry! Sounds like you had a blast! Very informative review the plane. Ive seen several on this plane. But none, quite as thorough as yours. 👍🏽
Cool, thanks
Beautiful aircraft. OMG it actually doesn't even strike me as dangerous when flown and respected.
Impressive. Going to put it on my list of aircrafts to consider.
Better get saving :-)
list of aircraft. The plural form of aircraft is aircraft. There's no such word as aircrafts.
@@skyboy1956 Doesn't bode well.
@@skyboy1956 Even the BBC call planes "aircrafts" now, in their news articles. I truly despair for this country.
Edit: I think this country is full of sheeps who don't know how to spell
Wow that’s absolutely amazing 🤩 I’d love one of those 🌝
Really enjoyed watching that ☝️
Thank you! Cheers!
wonderful review, thank. it would be great to have some acrobatic capability but, for the intended audience/customer, it seems awesome. would love to get a ride in her.
Hi Terry, I've only just had a chance to see this video, what a fab little aircraft. Sadly, now that HMG has chopped my winter fuel payment I don't think I'll be ordering one any time soon🙄 Oh well, back to MSFS😉 Stay safe🙃🙂
Well what about the kids inheritance, you could blow that :-)
@@ShortField 🤣🤣
I’m a former hang glider and want something I can fly from a pasture in the evening for 30-40 minutes in my neighborhood. I don’t have to worry about restricted air or airports. I’m thinking about a powered ultralight. I hope I can find instruction and sales near central Arkansas.
Ok people, a bit of a relaity check from somone who knows what thay are talking about. I am a Flight Instructor with 5000 hrs dual given. I have sent about 700+ student pilots on their 'First Solo". Of the 3000 different students I have trained, only 1 or 2 of them would be able to handle an aircraft of this performance level with 31 hrs of flight training experience. A very good student would be at least 150 hrs before they can even start training in this aircraft.
Thanks for posting this. It looks like a heck of a lot of fun, but it's not exactly a C-152! .if you get low, slow, uncoordinated, and stall on a base to the final turn, just pull the chute. - maybe not!
I’m an ATP. I agree 100%
I think there is some instructor padding here. It’s ok. I would expect nothing less.
I agree with your general aviation 31hr assessment, but not the 1 or 2 out of 3000. Apples to pears I know, but I sent quite a number solo in high performance military trainers at the 8-10 hrs mark. Outside of bashing the circuit, these students were later flying solo IFR/Aerobatics/Low level/ Formation [not all at the same time!] at much less than 150hrs total. Just sayin'
@@spdaltidyou are correct. His numbers don’t add up at all. I was an instructor for 1500 hours. Majority of my students would solo in less than 20 hours. And most could handle an aircraft like this rather quickly.
Thanks for sharing! I wonder what brand, etc. is that small mirror. I want one
It's for checking the pax in the back doesn't touch anything :-)
31 hours training and a high performance sport aircraft sounds like a dangerous combination to me...
31 hours minimum I doubt anyone would do it in that time, however that is possible. Thanks for your watch and for commenting sir.
Very true
@@ShortField I might of skipped over your mentioning any fees for flight time cost for being checked out or if there is any checkout to fly it away for certificated pilots.
Dead right Sir.
You're Right & So Are 200+ Mile An Hour Cars & Motorcycles On Poorly Maintained Highways & Interstates. Thank You.
Iam lucky enough to have had a flight in G-MAKO. Its a very impressive aircraft, ultra fast and has very nice easy handling although I think its too complicated an aircraft to fly with only thirty odd hours training from scratch. I really enjoyed flying it but you do lose some of the STOL characteristics of other more affordable microlights and the amount of pitch up you need to slow the thing down is incredible. It is also pretty awkward to get in and out of even for someone young and flexible like me. Its a great plane but you can buy a lot of GA aircraft performance for less than a third of the price.
No ones going to be in this in 31 hours, however it's a great selling point. I don't know what you think but to me this is not really a practical aircraft for touring as although there's that massive range you'd be hard pressed to fly anywhere in Europe for 10 hours VFR.
@@ShortField This is the bottom line issue...
I find it incredibly strange that there are RVs etc that are Night and IFR approved to fly under permit from the LAA .. but this £250,000 brand new airplane isn't.
Nice airplane! Well done.
But this would be a killer for the average zero time trainee. This clip is hopefully not aiming for the below average enthusiast... living in fantasy land.
If you really expect to fly this almost "high performance" airplane after 31 hours... (from pedestrian to pilot) you need to train with the airforce. In other words: You have to be qualified and selected !
Regards from the 747 cockpit ✈
(fmr P-51 , T-6, PC-7 jockey and instructor on other airplanes, 747, 737).
But I have to admit: The clickbait worked pretty well.. 😉
And, more importantly: It's a very cool airplane ! Good luck with it.
.
In Australia this would have VH Reg. and you'd need a PPL... A Rec Aviation license wouldn't be sufficient due to the speed and the retractable gears....
Interesting that every country treats ultralights differently.
She's a real beauty... thanks for sharing. :)
I really don't like our licensing system over here, having met a few NPPL and LAPL license holders here in the UK (a few not all obviously), their lack of knowledge and proficiency scares me!
Modern Microlights are much faster and can be way more complicated than your basic Cessna 152 but you need LESS training?! I'm glad the 6 hour conversion for the Shark is mandatory.
The medical requirements are a joke, how many elderly drivers really shouldn't be on the road let alone in the sky, self certification is dangerous.
Quite a nice little craft!
Don't ya just love getting someone awesome in the tower. Now if only I could afford to get one of those planes here in the US. I had to give up my training when dad sold his plane.
Will my 6'4" , long-legged body fit in the Shark? I'd absolutely _love_ one of those! 😮❤
This looks like an RC model I used to fly from Multiplex! And it was called the Shark, but I had no idea it was based on a full size. One difference, it was a pusher prop.
That plane looks awesome!
What a lovely aircraft and almost affordable!
Yes, you could get a couple with matching paint jobs :-)
Ease of flying (controlling) the aircraft is only one aspect to becoming a pilot. You've also got to learn procedures, absorb a lot of info the FAA will test you on, learn airport operations, airport layouts, navigation by air and a big one - learning how to talk to ATC and follow correctly their instructions.
Truly a lovely looking aircraft. Seems economical to run as well, or would be if avgas was cheaper.
I wonder how these will depreciate over time? I know older planes like Cherokees can be had for a fraction of the cost.
However, I think flying is always going to be expensive, and a pipe dream for most
Great video & review of an impressive machine.
Many thanks John!
N36LV builder here. With respect, I completely disagree. This is not a Lancair 4 with a very unforgiving wing below 70kts. 160kts true means 130kts indicated around 10,000ft. With that excellent visibility and 40mph stall speed this looks like a slightly quicker version of the original Diamond Katana. One of the most memorably easiest airplanes to fly, especially in the landing phase. I applaud their efforts at fuel efficiency and cockpit design. Probably a big baby to fly….I want one!
Flown around the world safely once by a 19 year old girl and then by her brother who was 17. It's really easy to fly but things happen quickly at 150 knots. Thank you great comment.
What would be the connection with DA20 Katana, if i may ask ?
Only that after decades of flying aging Pipers and Cessnas, it was the most refreshing new design (at the time) which sipped fuel, had a reasonable cruise speed and was without peer the easiest plane to fly near the runway environment and into ground effect (my Velocity notwithstanding).
great i have many serious medical conditions and i really want to start flying!!!
Gotta love it, “they thought of everything”.
A viewing window in the wing with a vertical viewing angle is useless unless your already on the ground.
And lets face it for 300k you can get a lot of quality and time proven aircraft, insane licence conditions or not
:-)
Oh that thing is made in my country of CZ! 😲
Awesome flight..!
Thanks! 👍
Absolutely excellent informative video! And, a beautiful airplane!
Great video, super helpful and interesting. Would love an IMC rated one though.
Lovely machine. Great vid as always Terry. It’s too many pennies for me. Over 1/4 of a mil 😢. When I win the lotto one day 😂
If you do take me flying in it :-)
One big question that may sound obvious, but does it have stick priority?
That's a great question, no, the two sticks are tied together.
Pretty good deal and nice experimental
Beautiful
What a fun little aeroplane. Pity it's not aerobatic, though.
Just my thoughts. +4 I think is just not it.
All the instructors dropping in their qualifications suggesting a 100hp aircraft is high perfomance.. low stall speed and a same HP as a Cessna 152 Suggest it's actually safer than a c152
And arguably a hell of a lot more comfortable, more enjoyable, and uses less fuel. Now if only I can find $300k.
Seems some 'instructors' on here want to puff up their self importance. I had one instructor many years ago, that made it really hard for students just to bump up his $$$$. Most of his students eventually moved to other instructors or quit. Guess what? All the students who certified with other instructors are still alive.
A 152 and similar types are known as "elevators" They just go up and down but not much sideways. great for a greenhorn to build time in.
@@tonylam9548 but this has a lower stall speed than a 152. Where is there any evidence that's it's any harder than that to fly .. yes it goes faster but it lands slower which is where most accidents happen in the pattern ..
@@PILOTCIRRUSASIA I don't know, it might be easier, the thing is, this is a much faster and looks like an agile plane. Inexperienced people might have issues in managing speed or they might get carried away and do stuff they shouldn't and maybe they wouldn't try at all in a slow moving truck like chesna. This is obviously a better plane, and in certain respects, safer - I bet it's a better glider than a C152/172 for one. So I don't know... noone is gonna complain for the minimal requirements or the price, if instructors are complaining, maybe they should train properly for this type of aircraft. They too might complain cause they wanna justify more hours of training, who knows. I think they should certify this plane for spins and abnormal departures, cause it's a plane where you wanna do things, it's best if the plane can actually do them and the airframe can cope. Then again, people will need to be trained on those as well. Is this in an UL license? It should be, I don't know. It's a far better plane, progress is progress, better materials, aerodynamics, better engine, cheaper, it's a plane, it carries risks, people will need to do their own homework as well, not totally based on instructors. I'm not a "safety" person really. At least not the UK kind of "safety". If you need a license to climb stairs or go over a gap, maybe you shouldn't be flying planes at all. Let others do it. The UK got the money for the expensive type training and old expensive "elevator" (LOL) type planes, maybe this isn't for the UK market.
lucky you Terry what an experience....
Very interesting, made the Sportcruiser feel very slow :-)
@@ShortField I'll bet!!
Had ~10 hours fuel in my Commanche across 6 tanks and my longest single hop was 8 hours. That was certainly enough for personal endurance in anyone's book 🙂
Day and a half from nothing to fly a high performance airplane? Sure, what could possibly go wrong?
It's the minimum!
i think it can be done, with a good intensive training program. it's not for the average student flying 2 or 3 times a week. but a structured program flying the way military trains, 31 hours is very reasonable
Interesting aircraft, reminds me a bit of the Embraer Tucano trainer and it appears they've been used for circumnavigations already which is quite impressive.
Haha! So impressed by that little back and forth with ATC. Good job mate. From America where we usually say dude 😆
Cool, thanks dude!
What an awesome plan, when will they be available in the U.S.
Awesome aircraft thank you for posting, off out to purchase a lottery ticket. 🤣🛩
Me too!
I've already got one..and I mean the lottery ticket!👍👍🤣 Good luck to you all!
@@tonytheantony 😂😂
Yeah me too!
Rich folk toys.....must be nice. 😐
Impressive bird ! I'd love one.
You and me both!
Could this be the new aircraft on the channel ? Short field doing some longer tours around europe would be amazing!
Very informative video Terry and lucky you!
Thank you kindly Tim it was fun to make.
Amazing!!! Just 31 hours !!!!! Fu-k that is terrifying !!!!!
Yeah that's what we need, people NOT medically cleared to fly above us because what could possibly go wrong? Lawyers drooling over the possibilities.
That's the part that worries me the most about this, not how few hours you need to be able to fly it.
I suspect that a number of people who self declare because they "don't need a medical" would probably fail a medical. And they know it.
I work in the classic car business and some of the MOT exempt cars I've seen out in the wild would be flagged as dangerous if they ever went near an MOT bay.
Found the Anti-freedom clown 🤡
Lovely/capable little airplane!
They're remarkable little aircraft, very nice (at a price🤔).
I think that a fixed gear version would be useful too.
I'd like to see something similar, but side by side.
I'm also wondering with small ailerons what the crosswind capability is.
And, in the 600kg category, why no step under the wing to help access and egress.
They start from as little as 240,000 euros for a basic version :-) I think the extra weight and drag from fixed gear (the retracts have a lot of Carbon Fibre in them and have a low operation speed of 70 knots) would make them a bit of a waste of time.
Add up all your requirements and you got a totally different aircraft!😊
@@ShortField Hi Terry, I'll sell a body part or two🤫🤫😲😲🤭🤭 Understood re the undercart now, it's just one more thing to service, to go wrong, adds complexity, moves away from LSA/Microlight K.I.S.S ethos. It's a fancy thing to have though, makes the aeroplane very slippery too👍😊 Trailing link retracts can be a double edged sword though - at times too 'soft'🤔 Swings and roundabouts I guess.
@@hugostiglitz6914 If the medical isn't an issue, and one invests a little more in training, then good second hand, aircraft, with similar capabilities can be had for less money in the PPL type categories🤔🤔
@@musoseven8218 You'd be hard pressed to find an aircraft with the same short field performance, the same fuel consumption and the same cruise speed and the same avionics. Also the maintenance requirements.
It says in the upload, it's probably aimed at people with money who wouldn't pass the medical.
Some people like their toys new.
I'm not a pilot, not likely ever to be one, but I am interested somewhat in flying and planes (for some strange reason!) - love watching your content. Hope to meet you one day so you can buy me a coffee :)
I might do if you're lucky, no fancy ones though :-) Thanks so much and nice that someone actually reads the trash I write in the description :-)
Czech aircraft from Hradec králové. 🇨🇿✌🤙🤓
It’s got amazing range for a small plane….1697 nm range is absolutely fantastic.
Terry, do you realise that you've accidentally given birth to Top Gear for the skies?!
Great aircraft! I just wish microlight category planes could be IFR certified. Does it have the relevant Nav radios?
Hi Michael, that's so funny. It does have everything for IFR including a heated pitot (which unusual for a microlight).
Flying well is not a simple and easy set of skills. It is not. An overactive imagination, blind passion and overexcitement can easily get you very quickly out of the walking alive group. Flying a "low and slow" ultralight is very achievable if you are not reckless and impulsive, follow rules and watch and totally respect and avoid the weather that is beyond yours and the aircraft's limitations. With high performance, fast planes the whole game drastically changes for the worse, and that's why even very experienced pilots who become overconfident in those planes leave this world way too early. Get into the thousands of hours of disciplined flight on a slower plane before you get a plane like the one here. Love aviation? Love yourself way more!!
Yes I enjoyed this video. 👍
I wasn't aware that the FAA's MOSAIC rules were in effect already. Where did you hear about it?
I never once said they were in effect, I said once MOSAIC is here they will be available to sport pilots. Please let me know if you heard different and tell me where in the video I said that and I'll change it.
Can you get permanent landing gear for tundra tires possible optional tail dragger edition and float option ... im impressed with the shark curious about landing gear options now