Berkut aircraft
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Berkut aircraft are tandem-seating two-seat homebuilt canard aircraft that are built primarily of carbon fiber and fiberglass.
The Berkut aircraft was designed by Dave Ronneberg as part of a business partnership between Ronneberg and Don Murphy between 1989 and 1992. In 1992 their partnership dissolved, and Ronneberg brought the aircraft to market as a kit. A series of lawsuits between the two resulted in bankruptcy for both. The kit was resurrected by Renaissance Composites, under Richard Riley in 1996. In January 2001, under pressure from Ronneberg, Renaissance sold the business to [1] Berkut Engineering, owned by Vicki Cruise. That company withdrew the aircraft from the market in 2002. Ronneberg continues with the project, which is now directed at UAV (Unmanned Aerial Vehicle) markets. In 2003 a deal was struck to sell the project to Republic Aerospace, but it was not consummated. Cruise is no longer involved with day-to-day operations, but maintains ownership.
The Berkut is descended from the Rutan Long-EZ, with the primary differences being retractable gear, dual canopies, and molded fuselage, strakes, and spar. Aerodynamically only minor changes were made. The fuselage was stretched, and the nose, canard, instrument panel and plot moved forward one foot. The main wing trailing edge was straightened, removing a small kink in the Long EZ wing, the lower winglet was removed and the aileron size increased. Early Berkuts used wings and canard that were structurally similar to the Long-EZ and using a solid Styrofoam core, but constructed with carbon fiber skins instead of fiberglass (fuselage and winglets remained fiberglass). Later versions (kits produced after spring 2000) used fully-molded canards and wings, leaving only minor fairings and tip surfaces to be carved from foam. The Berkut has always used the Roncz canard airfoil, which is more tolerant of bug and rain contamination than the original GAU airfoil used on the Long-EZ.
Berkuts used a retractable landing gear system designed by Shirl Dickey for his E-Racer homebuilt. Originally Berkut used gear parts produced by Dickey, but over time they were repeatedly re-engineered and strengthened. Later kits had gear components produced entirely in-house. Like the earlier Vari-Eze and Long EZ, the Berkut parks with it's nose gear retracted, to prevent the plane from tipping over backwards when there isn't a pilot in the front seat. Some early Berkuts utilized hydraulic nose-gear extension systems, but most have used an electro-mechanical jack-screw. The electric system allows the pilot to get into the airplane with the nose down, then raises the airplane with him inside.
While the Long-EZ was originally designed for the Lycoming O-235 108-118 hp engine, the Berkut was designed from the outset for the larger Lycoming IO-360 180 hp engine. The aircraft was later adapted (with a different engine mount and battery location) to accept the 260 hp Lycoming IO-540, which most builders chose. With the 540, some have reportedly reached speeds of 300 mph in level flight.
A flight test of the aircraft, and photographs, can be found here: http://www.airbum.com/pireps/PirepBerkut.html
James Redmon, who built a Berkut, maintains a web page documenting his experience building and flying the plane http://www.berkut13.com/berkut.htm
Specifications
FULL THROTTLE, 6,000' MSL 247/265 MPH TRUE 13 /19.5 GPH
STANDARD CRUISE SPEED8,000' MSL, 75% POWER 239/255 MPH TRUE 10.3/16.2 GPH1256/852 MILE RANGE (30 MIN RESERVE)
ECONOMY CRUISE8,000' MSL 215 MPH TRUE 7.7 GPH1512 MILE RANGE (30 MIN RESERVE)
VNE (NEVER EXCEED SPEED) 350 MPH
VA (MANEUVERING SPEED) 230 MPH
VLE (LANDING GEAR EXTEND) 200 MPH
RATE OF CLIMB 2000/3000 FPM (SEA LEVEL)
MINIMUM CONTROLLABLE AIRSPEED 65 MPH
WINGSPAN 26' 8"
HEIGHT 7'6" (PARKED, GROUND TO WINGLET TIP)
LENGTH 18' 6"
SEATS 2, TANDEM
LANDING GEAR TRICYCLE, RETRACT
FLAPS NONE
ENGINE LYCOMING IO-360 OR IO-540 WITH ELECTRONIC IGNITION
HORSEPOWER 180/260 MCP AT 2750 RPM
POWER LOADING 11.1 / 7.7 LBS / HP
WING AREA 110 SQUARE FT.
WING LOADING 18.1 LBS / SQUARE FT.
GLIDE RATIO (L/D) 18 / 1
PROPELLER COMPOSITE 67" DIAMETER, 91/103" PITCH (LIGHT SPEED ENGINEERING)
PROTOTYPE EMPTY WEIGHT 1035 / 1150 LB.
GROSS WEIGHT 2000/2100 LB.
USEFUL LOAD 965 LB. FUEL CAPACITY 58 U.S. GALLONS
DEMONSTRATED CROSS WIND COMPONENT 25 KTS
MIN. LANDING / TAKEOFF RUNWAY REQUIRED 1100 FEET
[edit] See also
- Rutan Long-EZ
- Rutan VariEze
- Rutan Defiant
- Steve Wright Stagger-Ez
- Cozy MK IV
- Velocity SE
- Velocity XL
- Canard

