Backcountry Pilot • Sportsman STOL question

Sportsman STOL question

Have you modified your aircraft? STC? STOL Kit? Major rebuild from just a data plate?
27 postsPage 1 of 21, 2

Sportsman STOL question

I have a request in to Stene Aviation about these topics but maybe someone on this forum has answers. Thinking of buying a 206 with Horton STOL. Is it possible to add the Sportsman leading edge to it and would I get much short field improvement?

I am in northeast Oklahoma. Any installers in this part of the country who have done more than a couple? I think there might be one in Bridgeport, TX. That’s close enough.
Last edited by Zzz on Sat Mar 09, 2024 7:55 am, edited 1 time in total.
Reason: Fixed the poor man’s fat finger
neoflyer offline
Posts: 10
Joined: Wed May 14, 2014 2:20 pm
Location: Claremore

Re: Sportsman STOL wuestions

I’ve installed many Sportsman LEs. I’ve also removed less aggressive cuffs like the Horton, owl, and Bush, etc in favor of the sportsman.

Shoot me a PM and we can talk on the phone if that would be helpful to you.

The sportsman is going to be an improvement over the Horton. You will however have to take the Horton off, which is not that big of a deal. The sportsman is bigger and will cover the old holes. You will have to fill the rivets on the top of the wing where you remove the stall fence. Technically, you need to remove the stall fence if you put the sportsman on.

Improvement aside, the real question is, is the juice worth a squeeze?

There are a lot of opinions here, but I think most people would say it’s probably not.

In your case, it’s really a decision based on budget, and your appetite for how much you wanna spend on the airplane.


I would probably do it, but it would be way way way down on my list. There are a lot of other things that would be done, and the sportsman would be last.

Toss some VG’s up on there right away, and see how you like how she flies that way.

Get the airplane, set up with other mods first, put lots of gas through it and see how well you are flying the airplane and how short you’re landing it. If you really want to squeak a couple more bits out of the old girl, then, by all means, go for it. WingX would be all at the same time.
Bigrenna offline
KB and Supporter
User avatar
Posts: 2339
Joined: Sun Sep 25, 2011 4:02 pm
Location: New England
Aircraft: C180H / C170B
www.bushwagoneast.com
www.avthreads.com

Re: Sportsman STOL question

Mountain Airframe in Mena, AR did mine. I'm happy with their install.
TXWagon offline
User avatar
Posts: 12
Joined: Mon Mar 30, 2020 7:32 am
Location: Godley
Aircraft: Cessna 180
Bücker Jungmann

Re: Sportsman STOL question

Agree with Bigrenna; add the VGs and fly with the Horton. Bought our 56 182 with Horton and VGs and she isn't too far behind Husky in STOL performance. I believe at this point the performance is more about the pilot (me) than what I'll gain with an equipment change.
flyingjack offline
Supporter
Posts: 335
Joined: Thu May 19, 2016 8:21 am
Location: Erie
Aircraft: Husky/T206H

Re: Sportsman STOL question

I disagree with Bigrenna, but as he mentioned, there are lots of opinions.
I had a Horton with VGs, removed it, and added the Sportsman and VGs, huge improvement which I noticed on the very first flight.
Before, I was doing approaches at 60mph and the plane felt like was falling from under me, did the change, and got stable 50mph approaches.
Just look at the graph, Horton might improve the old Cessna wing, but its almost the same as the new Cessna leading edge.
Look how big the Sportsman kit is, highly recommend it.
sportsmangraph.jpg
sportsmangraph.jpg (19.1 KiB) Viewed 3887 times
motoadve offline
User avatar
Posts: 1423
Joined: Wed Aug 18, 2010 8:29 am
Location: Issaquah
Aircraft: Cessna 182P
CJ 6 Nanchang
Cessna 170B

Re: Sportsman STOL question

I’ve had a Horton kit in my 180 for years; wheels, skis, and floats. It works great, and handles beautifully. 400’ landings all day long on wheels and wheel skis(on pavement/grass). Good takeoff performance in all regimes.

Now, motoadve posts some really cool, aggressive, instructive videos in his 182. If you want to do that type of flying, and go with him to gravel bars the Sportsman may be the ticket.

If it were me, I’d fly it as configured; then decide whether a Sportsman or WingX mod is necessary and worth the cost and effort.
Hope the airplane purchase goes well!
aqua offline
User avatar
Posts: 237
Joined: Mon Mar 03, 2008 6:43 pm
Location: NY

Re: Sportsman STOL question

Fly more, pay less. Get good.

MW
185Midwest offline
Supporter
User avatar
Posts: 437
Joined: Sun Sep 30, 2018 11:58 am
Location: Fort Wayne
Aircraft: C-185

Re: Sportsman STOL question

I agree with most of the other posts. Put VGs on it and fly the horton. I fly a stock wing 206 that blows the doors off most cuffed planes because I know my plane extremely well. Burn avgas and learn your plane. That will most likely have a greater effect then a cuff. Once you have it dialed in really well, then you can eek out the extra performance that the different cuff might give you.
A1Skinner offline
Supporter
User avatar
Posts: 5186
Joined: Sat Jan 21, 2012 11:38 am
Location: Eaglesham
FindMeSpot URL: [url:1vzmrq4a]http://share.findmespot.com/shared/faces/viewspots.jsp?glId=0az97SSJm2Ky58iEMJLqgaAQvVxMnGp6G[/url:1vzmrq4a]
Aircraft: Cessna P206A, AT402/502/602

Re: Sportsman STOL question

A good friend has a 185 with Cessna leading edge cuff. I installed a Sportsman and he notice a bit of improvement but jus a little bit. He says it was a waste of dollars. Buy 100 LL with the money. If you have lots of extra money send me a PM.

Tim
qmdv offline
User avatar
Posts: 3633
Joined: Wed Feb 15, 2006 10:22 pm
Location: Payette
FindMeSpot URL: http://share.findmespot.com/shared/face ... I5tqEOk0rc
Aircraft: Cessna 182

Re: Sportsman STOL question

I have a sportsman on my 53 180. I like it, it flies slower with more control than my friends 56 with a horton.

Sure, learn your plane well and fly it to the limit. Or add the cuff and do it with a significant safety margin.
StillLearning offline
Supporter
Posts: 417
Joined: Mon Nov 05, 2018 6:22 pm
Location: Salmon
Aircraft: Cessna 180 Skywagon 1953

Re: Sportsman STOL question

It's not a big balls 206, my baby brother 170B has a Horton cuff along with VG's and it all works together nicely along with a Lycoming 0-360. I wouldn't change a thing, nor would I go to the trouble of changing it for another style of cuff. As others has wisely said just spend more on avgas.
Mapleflt offline
Supporter
User avatar
Posts: 2324
Joined: Sun Feb 12, 2017 2:35 pm
Location: Bradford
Aircraft: Cessna S170B NexGen (NM) Variant

Re: Sportsman STOL question

My 185 has the Horton (and flint tips) and it will fly with the airspeed indicating high 20's MPH when you are light, and I can land it in about 300 ft (when I luck out and do everything right)

Definitely doesn't seem worth the cost, headache to squeeze a little more out of it.

Landing short is more about skill than what kind of wing leading edge you have.
Ross4289 offline
User avatar
Posts: 316
Joined: Tue Apr 13, 2021 6:38 am
Location: Eveleth
FindMeSpot URL: 300434034825650
Aircraft: 185

Re: Sportsman STOL question

If you are not looking for super short performance, its fine to keep the Horton, but be aware the Sportsman will give you safer margins, shorter take offs for sure, it is made to be more spin resistant (we tried in my 182 years ago during an unusual maneuvers training, and it did not wanted to go into a spin, but with more of an aft CG I am sure it will enter a spin eventually, which we did in the 170 with CC during training)

Full flaps heavy loaded go around and in an emergency will make it,( Did it many times during the unusual attitudes training) your landing speed will be a lot slower than with the Horton in case of an emergency landing.

Whatever Cessna I own that can have a Sportsman , I will put one on.
motoadve offline
User avatar
Posts: 1423
Joined: Wed Aug 18, 2010 8:29 am
Location: Issaquah
Aircraft: Cessna 182P
CJ 6 Nanchang
Cessna 170B

Re: Sportsman STOL question

I have RSTOL and Sportsman in 185. Maybe it has saved me from a stall spin when getting a little too slow in a turn base to final but I try not to do that. It is nifty to see it keep flying with the airspeed in the 30s up high but the angle of attack is crazy. I can barely see over the dash let alone land it looking at the sky. I figure the 206 tail would be digging a trench for planting season if you tried to use that. There is probably a measurable speed penalty with more lift you do not need in cruise. It seems most useful on floats where you need all the lift you can get, in a stol competition, or really tight margin backcountry stuff like gravel bars. I will not be doing any of those things. Some do like motoadve.
frstnflt offline
User avatar
Posts: 108
Joined: Wed Oct 30, 2019 4:07 am
Location: Mooresville
Aircraft: Cessna 185

Re: Sportsman STOL question

motoadve wrote:If you are not looking for super short performance, its fine to keep the Horton, but be aware the Sportsman will give you safer margins, shorter take offs for sure, it is made to be more spin resistant (we tried in my 182 years ago during an unusual maneuvers training, and it did not wanted to go into a spin, but with more of an aft CG I am sure it will enter a spin eventually, which we did in the 170 with CC during training)

Full flaps heavy loaded go around and in an emergency will make it,( Did it many times during the unusual attitudes training) your landing speed will be a lot slower than with the Horton in case of an emergency landing.

Whatever Cessna I own that can have a Sportsman , I will put one on.


Lots of "For sures" and "wills" and "lot shorters" in here. I disagree. It might make a difference, but in reality how much? My stock wing, as in no cuff, no VGs, nothing 206 will take off and fly under 40mph. It will easily hold 39mph in slow flight and do 30 degree bank turns at that without feeling mushy. A cuff needs more angle of attack to work and I'd be dragging the tail. Id argue that the weight of any cuff over the stock wing would make my performance worse. I am measured take offs at 172 feet. How much is a sportsman gonna improve that? Probably not enough to warrant the cost. That said, I have one in a box to put on it, and I am going to do it just to give my customers a truly honest opinion backed by numbers. Not trying to start a pissing match, but these are 206 numbers, which is what the OP was asking about. A 182 with less power, maybe there is more benefit. But knowing how to wring everything out of your airplane is going to be safer at the end of the day, cuff or not.
For a 206 on wheels that has any type of cuff on it already, I sure wouldn't take one off to put another on.
A1Skinner offline
Supporter
User avatar
Posts: 5186
Joined: Sat Jan 21, 2012 11:38 am
Location: Eaglesham
FindMeSpot URL: [url:1vzmrq4a]http://share.findmespot.com/shared/faces/viewspots.jsp?glId=0az97SSJm2Ky58iEMJLqgaAQvVxMnGp6G[/url:1vzmrq4a]
Aircraft: Cessna P206A, AT402/502/602

Re: Sportsman STOL question

A1Skinner wrote:Lots of "For sures" and "wills" and "lot shorters" in here. I disagree. It might make a difference, but in reality how much?


+1

Totally agree. When I first started modifying these birds, I was all about doing everything all the time. As I gained a little bit of experience and watched a lot of water run under the bridge, my opinions have tempered.

As I said before, Sportsman is a great mod... probably a "must have," but the question is when its done... and with a Horton already on there, put the hard earned rent money into agvas first.
Bigrenna offline
KB and Supporter
User avatar
Posts: 2339
Joined: Sun Sep 25, 2011 4:02 pm
Location: New England
Aircraft: C180H / C170B
www.bushwagoneast.com
www.avthreads.com

Re: Sportsman STOL question

David, what’s the empty weight and CG of your 206?
Belloypilot offline
Supporter
User avatar
Posts: 97
Joined: Thu Dec 24, 2015 10:45 pm
Location: Grande Prairie
Aircraft: Husky A-1B, Bonanza V35B, AcroSport II

Re: Sportsman STOL question

Lots of "For sures" and "wills" and "lot shorters" in here. I disagree. It might make a difference, but in reality how much? My stock wing, as in no cuff, no VGs, nothing 206 will take off and fly under 40mph. It will easily hold 39mph in slow flight and do 30 degree bank turns at that without feeling mushy. A cuff needs more angle of attack to work and I'd be dragging the tail. Id argue that the weight of any cuff over the stock wing would make my performance worse. I am measured take offs at 172 feet. How much is a sportsman gonna improve that? Probably not enough to warrant the cost. That said, I have one in a box to put on it, and I am going to do it just to give my customers a truly honest opinion backed by numbers. Not trying to start a pissing match, but these are 206 numbers, which is what the OP was asking about. A 182 with less power, maybe there is more benefit. But knowing how to wring everything out of your airplane is going to be safer at the end of the day, cuff or not.
For a 206 on wheels that has any type of cuff on it already, I sure wouldn't take one off to put another on.[/quote]

Sures wills and shorters , because I did this conversion myself in my 182, flew the plane one week after the conversion , and was doing approaches 8 to 10mph slower than before, I think that is worth the change , at least for the flying I like to do.
motoadve offline
User avatar
Posts: 1423
Joined: Wed Aug 18, 2010 8:29 am
Location: Issaquah
Aircraft: Cessna 182P
CJ 6 Nanchang
Cessna 170B

Re: Sportsman STOL question

motoadve wrote:…flew the plane one week after the conversion , and was doing approaches 8 to 10mph slower than before


Its an improvement, but the Sportsman does not lower the stall speed 10mph more than the Horton.
Bigrenna offline
KB and Supporter
User avatar
Posts: 2339
Joined: Sun Sep 25, 2011 4:02 pm
Location: New England
Aircraft: C180H / C170B
www.bushwagoneast.com
www.avthreads.com

Re: Sportsman STOL question

Bigrenna wrote:
motoadve wrote:…flew the plane one week after the conversion , and was doing approaches 8 to 10mph slower than before


Its an improvement, but the Sportsman does not lower the stall speed 10mph more than the Horton.


Unless you let your 250 lb buddy out of the plane before the comparison flight.
Zzz offline
Janitorial Staff
User avatar
Posts: 2854
Joined: Fri Oct 08, 2004 11:09 pm
Location: northern
Aircraft: Swiveling desk chair
Half a century spent proving “it is better to be thought a fool than to open your mouth and remove all doubt.”

DISPLAY OPTIONS

Next
27 postsPage 1 of 21, 2

Who is online

Users browsing this forum: No registered users and 0 guests

Latest Features

Latest Knowledge Base