THE CYCLONE AX3
This is the Cyclone AX3. It’s a very safe, gentle and forgiving little aeroplane
ideally suited to those who just want a leisurely float around the sky at around 35 to 50 miles
an hour.
The AX3, like the
T600 goes back a long long way to the very early 1980s. It was originally designed by a NASA
scientist - Don Chiota – and called the Weed Hopper. In its original form it was powered
by a 250cc single cylinder engine and only had rudder and elevator controls.
The design was eventually bought by a French company who re-designed it, adding aileron control
on the wings plus more powerful engines as engine technology progressed and successfully manufactured
several thousand of them in kit form. Many of these were, and still are presumably, used along
the Mediterranean shores for banner towing and when fitted with floats, used for joy-rides as
well as being used by thousands of pilots throughout Europe for normal flying pursuits.
The first microlight pilot to fly at Popham airfield (one of our club members – Gordon
Clephane) purchased and built one of these kits ..... then proceeded to teach himself to fly
it over several months by lots of ground handling, progressing to fast taxying down the runway
and after many short little hops which gradually progressed into longer and higher ones, he did
his first circuit and has now amassed many hours of the incredible fun that only this form of
flight can bring.
The aircraft was brought into this country in 1993 by Bill Sherlock of Cyclone Airsports and
re-designed yet again, in order to comply with the incredibly strict CAA design criteria for
obtaining the necessary UK airworthiness certificate. Eventually taken over by Pegasus Aircraft
of Marborough many of these were manufactured right through until the end of 2002 but Pegasus
decided to stop there because the design was getting a little ‘old-hat’ in the light
of current trends and besides, being the leading European manufacturers of hang-gliders and Flexwing
aircraft, they were busy enough anyway. Of course they will still be producing spares for for
the AX3 for many years to come.
We’ve been running a fleet of AX3s very successfully since 1993 and accrued many thousands
of trouble-free hours on them. People often ask the question “What is the life of these
aircraft” Well, it’s a bit like the case of the old lady’s broom. It’s
the same broom but it’s had lots of new heads and lots of new handles! In the case of our
fleet, they’ve all been through several engines (500cc twin-cylinder, CD-ignition, two-stroke
engines delivering 54hp at full power) which we literally throw away at 1000 hours and replace.
They’ve all had a second set of clothes (wing, fuselage and tail covers) but about 80%
of the original airframes on all of the fleet are fully serviceable and will be for the forseeable
future or until an inspector conducting the annual ‘MOT’ inspection decides that
a component needs renewing. Then it’s on the phone to Pegasus for a new part, unbolt the
old one, bolt up the new one and away into the wide blue yonder again!
Thousands of trial lessons have been flown on our fleet of AX3s. We’ve taught hundreds
of people to fly them right through to their Private Pilot’s Licences and quite a few of
these have since gone on to become either instructors or airline pilots. Who knows, when you
fly off on your hols, the captain could well be one of our ex students!
The RAF saw this aircraft as an excellent alternative to teach their cadets in instead of the
ageing and expensive Chipmunk. The photograph here showing the RAF markings on the wings and
tail was an AX3 they were evaluating for the purpose. The prototype was tested by none less than
the renowned test pilots at the Empire Test Pilots School at RAF Boscombe Down in Hampshire and
received an absolutely glowing report regarding its safety and performance.
Like the T600, a truly remarkable little success story.
AX3 :: Twiggy :: T600N
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