Pinejuice wrote:EDIT: I would also like to comment that these kinds of numbers plague the industry. The bearhawk patrol site specifications claim a landing speed of 35, lets assume that is also the stall speed... For that specific aircraft, a stall at 35mph would require a lift coefficient of 3.5!!! With nearly the same airfoil as the S21. The data on NACA airfoils (somewhat comparable to Riblett foils) is publicly available and I urge anyone interested to review the max lift coefficients achieved at reynolds numbers that these aircraft operate at. Review the stall speeds and lift coefficients reached by production aircraft (Cessna 170, 140, super cub) All reasonable values, certainly not exceeding 2.5+ CL.
Another bad offender: Cubcrafters - 3.26CL for the carbon cub FX.
Another bad offender: Kitfox - 3.55!!!! for the STi S7 Super Sport
Please note, that the lift generated by an aircraft is a function of velocity squared, knowing this, achieving just a couple extra mph is increasingly more difficult to achieve as you approach these extremely low speeds. Not to mention, measuring these speeds can be a challenge itself.
Check your assumptions and run the numbers again?
Advertised stall speeds will more commonly be tested at minimum weight, not gross weight. That's not the manufacturers lying either, that's just smart marketing.
The advertised Bearhawk speeds are accurate, and I'll stake my reputation on that. You'll note they advertise IAS, and make no secret of it. If you don't read thoroughly, it's possible to misinterpret what you are reading.
My Bearhawk 4-place will fly at 37 KTAS all day if needs be.

