Added eyebolts in the upper corners (already existed in the lower), plan on getting a cargo net made to keep stuff from going into the EEB.


asa wrote:We keep a gaff hook in the wing lockers of the navajo's because they are longer than a person's arms. I would recomend you do the same. Carbon fiber gaff hook of course... for weight.
Fraser Farmer wrote:Hi Phil,
Did you end up adding the Sportsman cuff to your Robertson equipped 185? If so, how do you like that combination?
Thanks
Matt
Fraser Farmer wrote:Hi Phil,
Did you end up adding the Sportsman cuff to your Robertson equipped 185? If so, how do you like that combination?
Thanks
Matt
Barnstormer wrote:Fraser Farmer wrote:Hi Phil,
Did you end up adding the Sportsman cuff to your Robertson equipped 185? If so, how do you like that combination?
Thanks
Matt
Not yet. I did a bunch of other mods including putting LED strobes all around the plane, head phone jacks for the back seat, replacing the airspeed indicator with one that reads in knots and mph and getting it painted with the RSTOL speeds (the old one wasn't), and getting the Fuel Injection looked at as it was too rich in the pattern.
Still to add is a new panel with a Dynon Skyview, and the Sportsmans.
mtv wrote:Fraser Farmer wrote:Hi Phil,
Did you end up adding the Sportsman cuff to your Robertson equipped 185? If so, how do you like that combination?
Thanks
Matt
Matt,
I got to be the guinea pig for this mod combination on a 185 I’d flown ~ 2000 hours at the time. Our aircraft folks wanted to try a Sportsman cuff on an RSTOL equipped 185.
So, they hired an experienced shop to install the Sportsman kit on the 185 I was assigned. I was sort of skeptical, but open to a fair trial.
I was REALLY impressed. I’d flown a few Sportsman equipped planes, but this was the first with before and after experience. The airplane became much more stable and forgiving at very high angle of attack. As you likely know, RSTOL airplanes can exhibit somewhat abrupt breaks in the stall, when pushed hard. The Sportsman pretty much did away with that characteristic. Plane just mushed into a sink. You could maneuver it hard, and it’d hang on, but sink mightily.
The result was the ability to actually approach and land slower, because the plane was much more solid and predictable at those high angles.
A totally unexpected additional benefit was that the Sportsman kit gave me back a bit of the aileron effectiveness lost with the RSTOL kit. That doubtless had to do with the aileron gap seals in the kit. Not huge, but definitely noticeable.
If I owned an RSTOL equipped plane now, first thing I’d do is install a Sportsman.
MTV
You would take the roberston cuff off. The templates would not fit otherwise, as they are designed either for the non cuffed or later cuffed wings, not designed to line up with any other stol kit cuff.Squash wrote:Ok, for the Sportsman experts out there, if I were to put a Sportsman Cuff on my RStol equipped 185, should I plan to remove the Robertson Cuff that was placed over my non-cambered 1972 leading edge? It seems crazy that I would have three cuffs if I were to slap the Sportsman on the Robertson on the factory.
Fraser Farmer wrote:mtv wrote:Fraser Farmer wrote:Hi Phil,
Did you end up adding the Sportsman cuff to your Robertson equipped 185? If so, how do you like that combination?
Thanks
Matt
Matt,
I got to be the guinea pig for this mod combination on a 185 I’d flown ~ 2000 hours at the time. Our aircraft folks wanted to try a Sportsman cuff on an RSTOL equipped 185.
So, they hired an experienced shop to install the Sportsman kit on the 185 I was assigned. I was sort of skeptical, but open to a fair trial.
I was REALLY impressed. I’d flown a few Sportsman equipped planes, but this was the first with before and after experience. The airplane became much more stable and forgiving at very high angle of attack. As you likely know, RSTOL airplanes can exhibit somewhat abrupt breaks in the stall, when pushed hard. The Sportsman pretty much did away with that characteristic. Plane just mushed into a sink. You could maneuver it hard, and it’d hang on, but sink mightily.
The result was the ability to actually approach and land slower, because the plane was much more solid and predictable at those high angles.
A totally unexpected additional benefit was that the Sportsman kit gave me back a bit of the aileron effectiveness lost with the RSTOL kit. That doubtless had to do with the aileron gap seals in the kit. Not huge, but definitely noticeable.
If I owned an RSTOL equipped plane now, first thing I’d do is install a Sportsman.
MTV
Mike,
Thanks for your knowledgeable input. I feel like I've never yet asked a Skywagon question where you haven't had experience in the exact configuration I'm asking about! What I'm actually wondering about is float performance of that configuration. Did you feel the RSTOL shortened up the takeoff run on floats? If you had the Sportsman would the RSTOL be a good add? I see they still sell the RSTOL kit although everyone seems to do the WingX now.
Matt
mtv wrote:Fraser Farmer wrote:mtv wrote:Fraser Farmer wrote:Hi Phil,
Did you end up adding the Sportsman cuff to your Robertson equipped 185? If so, how do you like that combination?
Thanks
Matt
Matt,
I got to be the guinea pig for this mod combination on a 185 I’d flown ~ 2000 hours at the time. Our aircraft folks wanted to try a Sportsman cuff on an RSTOL equipped 185.
So, they hired an experienced shop to install the Sportsman kit on the 185 I was assigned. I was sort of skeptical, but open to a fair trial.
I was REALLY impressed. I’d flown a few Sportsman equipped planes, but this was the first with before and after experience. The airplane became much more stable and forgiving at very high angle of attack. As you likely know, RSTOL airplanes can exhibit somewhat abrupt breaks in the stall, when pushed hard. The Sportsman pretty much did away with that characteristic. Plane just mushed into a sink. You could maneuver it hard, and it’d hang on, but sink mightily.
The result was the ability to actually approach and land slower, because the plane was much more solid and predictable at those high angles.
A totally unexpected additional benefit was that the Sportsman kit gave me back a bit of the aileron effectiveness lost with the RSTOL kit. That doubtless had to do with the aileron gap seals in the kit. Not huge, but definitely noticeable.
If I owned an RSTOL equipped plane now, first thing I’d do is install a Sportsman.
MTV
Mike,
Thanks for your knowledgeable input. I feel like I've never yet asked a Skywagon question where you haven't had experience in the exact configuration I'm asking about! What I'm actually wondering about is float performance of that configuration. Did you feel the RSTOL shortened up the takeoff run on floats? If you had the Sportsman would the RSTOL be a good add? I see they still sell the RSTOL kit although everyone seems to do the WingX now.
Matt
I honestly don't know how much or even if the Sportsman addition to that RSTOL 185 shortened up the float takeoffs. That's kind of a tough evaluation. What it DID do, however, is allowed me to get airborne and hang in ground effect better at slow speeds and in gusty conditions. The RSTOL allows the plane to fly at remarkably slow speeds.....the Sportsman makes it more stable at those slower speeds, thus allowing you to USE that RSTOL performance with more confidence, particularly in sketchy conditions. Which effectively, reduced the takeoff distance, I guess....
I had a couple of places I went in and out of with that plane on floats that were really narrow oxbow sloughs, surrounded by tall trees. In a wind, those places were easy to land in, but really spooky to launch out of. I slept in the airplane in those places a few times because I was dumb enough to land there in a breeze to pick up a load, then had to think better of whether to try a takeoff.
The Sportsman didn't really permit takeoff in much more wind, but when you took off in gusty conditions, the plane would launch and hang on, sometimes by its fingernails, where with just the RSTOL, it might not have been as much fun. Usually what happened there, since this was close to the water, was you'd just settle back into the water, which in a tight place like those meant cut the power and taxi back for another try.
Or take a nap.
MTV
atypicalguy wrote:What do you guys pay up there for a shop to install the sportsman LE, roughly? I wonder how much value these mods add to the plane vs cost to install. Still rocking the stock wing and honestly not doing enough STOL stuff to get excited about it. Landplane only, no floats. People say there is no cruise penalty for these mods but that seems hard to believe.
atypicalguy wrote:What do you guys pay up there for a shop to install the sportsman LE, roughly? I wonder how much value these mods add to the plane vs cost to install. Still rocking the stock wing and honestly not doing enough STOL stuff to get excited about it. Landplane only, no floats. People say there is no cruise penalty for these mods but that seems hard to believe.

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