1SeventyZ wrote:
Are you really saying there is a disadvantage to an inertial reel shoulder harness? I think one of the reasons inertial reel harnesses are valuable is so that you don't have to mount additional levers on your flap handle.
I'm saying that as convenient and worthwhile as it may be for a bunch of other things, the inertia reel does not correctly solve the built-in flap control problem, and too many people think it does. Penicillin is great too, but it doesn't cure the common cold.
The inertia reel system gives you the same freedom as the original lap-belt-only design.
Lap belts, inertia reels and loosened Hooker harnesses
all give you the freedom to lean forward, take your eyes off of where you're going and put them inside the cockpit, put your face close to the instrument panel, possibly bump your chest into the yoke (slow flight with the yoke back, like in a STOL landing), and fly the airplane in a contorted position while reaching the flaps.
Are you
really saying that this is the correct way to actuate the flaps?
This all takes place during the takeoff and landing phases of flight, when you might ought to be looking outside the airplane and concentrating on your LZ.
If Cessna had put the pilot's control yoke in the back seat, and the rudder pedals in the baggage compartment, you could eventually
overcome this problem and fly the airplane... but if someone came up with a simple way to bolt on a device that put the controls in a more convenient place it would be a lot better.
You can all be as annoyed with me (for being a smart ass) as you want, but the device I invented works as advertised and puts the flap control in the correct location. Cessna didn't do it, for reasons that appeared valid to them in 1948, so I did it now.
Now let's have some real fun -
The big "test" that I ask people to take, to see whether the EZ Flap is worthwhile for them, is pretty simple.
I challenge all of you with manual flap Cessnas and Pipers to put your ego (and mine) aside for a second and take this little test if you dare:
First, take the shoulder harness, inertia reel, Hooker, lap belt, etc. completely out of the equation. Don't wear any type of shoulder harness or pilot restraint for this test.
* Sit in your airplane with the seat adjusted for your height… flaps zero.
* Hold the yoke 2/3 aft (to simulate slow flight on takeoff and landing).
* Grab the flap handle with your thumb on the button, but DO NOT deploy flaps.
Now, while sitting there holding the flap lever at zero for a moment, HONESTLY ask yourself the following 6 questions …
1) Am I sitting upright in the correct, safe flying position?
2) How is my visibility and “situational awareness” ?
3) Am I leaning on (or too close to) the yoke for safety and maneuvering?
4) If I were landing or taking off right now, would I be able to pay full attention to the terrain, the runway, the obstacles, or other traffic?
5) If I were on a short, demanding strip hard on the brakes, would I have the same directional control and situational awareness as I had when I was sitting upright?
6) If I were taking off in this position, would I be able to "milk" the flaps back up slowly or would I be tempted to rush through it and let the airplane settle?
NOW : Sit up straight again, relax, look out the windshield, and now put your right hand just underneath the throttle knob (where the EZ Flap handle will be). Ask yourself the same 6 questions. If you can honestly say there is not a significant improvement by having the flap control in this location, then you won't benefit from the EZ Flap STC.
The inertia reel shoulder harness is a great invention. It provides additional convenience and free movement in the cockpit. But an inertia reel is not an excuse for an airplane owner to not address another problem that can be addressed.
The airplanes were built without inertia reels or flap handle extensions. If bolting on a $900 inertia reel is a valid upgrade (because it makes flying safer and more convenient), then bolting on a $500 flap handle extension is valid for the same !($*%*@# reason !