Doug
Rozendaal Report
Hello from soggy Central Texas....
I was in Burnett Texas for the annual
BlueBonnet Airshow. First the Bad news, The airshow rained
out, and Howard
Pardue fliped his Wildcat.
The good news is, Howard only got a scratch on the head,
the airplane damage is
as little as could be expected for a roll over, and I GOT
TO FLY THE EVO ROCKET!
Mark Fredrick was at there with the Falcon Flight and they
performed the
opening, and pretty much closing ceremonies. It started
raining while Falcon
Flight was flying during the national anthem and poured the
rest of the afteroon.
In the Morning after begging, pleading, groveling, and
general sucking up on my
part, Mark offered to let me fly the new wing. What a
machine!!!!!
Marcel Dassault said, "For an airplane to fly well, it must
look good." Well
the EVO Rocket is off to a good start, the new wing looks
great on the airplane.
It has much better lines than the traditional Rocket which,
I think, "looks"
like the wing is too short. I have always thought the RV-3
had the best lines
in the RV- series and thought the Rocket looked better than
that when viewed on
the ground. All the RV's look like Cherokees that were
designed for ease of
contruction when they fly over, and the standard Rocket
wing looks too short.
Well when the EVO Rocket is observed flying over, it looks
GREAT. Mr. Daussault
would approve.
Let me be clear, I have only flown Marks old Rocket one
time, and I was
impressed, but I do not have enough recent experience to
directly compare them.
The new wing has a Laminar Flow airfoil like the Mustang,
and I expected it to
fly much more like it. Somewhat true....
The RV's when compared to a fighter, fly much more like the
Corsair than the
Mustang, they have big fat, fairly lightly loaded wings.
The Mustang, and the
EVO have a thinner wing with the fattest part of the wing
back at about 50%
chord instead of about 30% on the RV/Rocket. For all your
benefit, I wish Kevin
Horton had flown it, so he could tell you better what it is
going on.
The launch is, well, like a Rocket... It really scoots. The
climb rate is,
well, like a Rocket.... The pointy kind I mean. The Rocket
needs a little more
right rudder than an RV, just think of it like an RV with a
10 knot crosswind.
I did not collect any data and we were flying under a
fairly low ceiling. The
airplane does not fly like an RV. It flys very nicely, just
very different.
Mark is still working with control ratios but if he sells
it just like it is
now, it will be fine. This airplane has a longer stick than
his other Rocket
and so the ailerons require more stick displacement and
that yeilds less aileron
displacement, but a similar roll rate I would suppose.
The stalls are straight forward, again I did not collect
data, the airplane
breaks cleanly, with any power on at all the nose up
attitude is very high.
Both clean and dirty stalls are similar. In steep turns the
airplane really
holds energy! I did a 3.5 G turn at 25/25 and it just hung
in there. My
recollection is that the Std Rocket payed off some energy
when loaded up.
I am sure that the new wing will like altitude better than
the short wing
because of aspect ratio and it should really show dramatic
cruise speed
improvement at high altitude.
I tried flying the airplane holding the stick about 3
inches down from the top
and I liked it better, the control forces are fine. The
ailerons require more
displacement than the elevator which is, I think, requires
a little less
movement with this wing than the standard. It is not goosey
in pitch at all, and
the pressures are good, it just doesnt take much movement.
Also, the airplane "Points" better than the standard RV,
that is, if you point
the nose at something on the ground, the RV with tend to
accelerate and pitch
up, this airplane will stay on the point with little
effort, what that says is
the airplane has less airspeed/trim stability, but it does
not seem to be
noticable flying VFR. It might be more noticable IFR?
The airplane has lots of lift, it is easy in the pattern,
at 80 kts, the pitch
attitude is good with the flaps down and it lands like an
RV. The titanium gear
has more spring in it than steel and it will bounce easily.
I did not 3 point
it, but based on the stalls I did and what Mark said, a
full stall 3 point would
have the gear pretty far in the air when the T/W touched.
So, I had a Real Big "Rocket Grin" when I landed. I am
certain the performance
will be better because of the aspect ratio. Standard
Rockets would not want to
dogfight this airplane, because they would get waxxed. The
airplane should LOVE
altitude and benefit greatly from cruising at higher
altitudes. This airplane
is, with out a doubt, the best looking RV deriviative
ever!!! And, as true to
Mr Dassault, the airplane flies well, not as good as an
RV-4, but almost nothing
does. Having said that no one would be dissatisfied with
it's handling, and
Mark is still tweaking the control ratios. The real
question is, if I were
ordering, which would I order? No Question, The EVO wing.
Just about the time I think I might be satisfied with
someone's cast off Rocket,
Mark comes up with something new..... I hate you Mark
Fredrick!!! ;-)
Tailwinds
Doug "I wanna Rocket(with an EVO wing)" Rozendaal