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ACCIDENTS AND INCIDENTS
(From CP42, Page 5, October, 1984)
A South African
LongEZ crashed off the end of a 1700 foot rough field when the pilot attempted to
take off with a quartering tailwind. The airplane accelerated slowly on the very rough
strip and failed to lift off before running off the end of the strip into a marsh. The
nose gear collapsed, the nose dug in and the airplane flipped. The pilot and passenger
were both injured and the airplane badly damaged.
This accident was one that need not have occurred. The Long-EZ is
not suitable for short rough fields. You can land a Long-EZ on a rough strip that you may
not be able to fly out of. Remember, with a canard pusher configuration, such as the
Long-EZ, you have no prop blast over the elevator, and therefore you can not force the
airplane to rotate early and start the wings carrying the load. You have to accelerate to
flying speed, 50 to 60 knots. A rough field or even a grass field with long grass
(anything over 2" long) will greatly add to the rolling drag and slow down
your ability to accelerate to the point that you may need more runway than you have
available. As long as you fly your Long-EZ from a hard surface or a smooth grass field at
least 2500 feet long, you should have no problems. All aircraft are compromises, you
cannot have a Lear jet and a J-3 cut in one aircraft. The Long-EZ is no exception. It does
what it was designed to do very well. High speed, economical transportation is the
Long-EZs forte.