You're welcome Extra300s
Look forward to meeting you there.
extra300s wrote: Not fond of the idea that an engine is responsible for keeping the aircraft in the air. I know that one can auto rotate them by pushing the blades at a certain angle, but they come down slightly faster than a fixed wing.
Um, trikes and most aircraft have an engine that are responsible for keeping them in the air. Yes, autorotation is what glides a rotorwing to the ground, a state that only a Gyro is constantly in. Autorotation that is, so its not the engine that drives the rotor, rather the engine that provides the thrust then the wind provides the drag against the slow moving inner portion of the wing and lift is generated by the fast moving outer portion of the wing. This keeps the rotor turning and the gyro flying. In a freewheel state. While it is true that the glideslope may be steeper in a gyro than some trikes/fixed wings, never forget that a gyro cannot stall and can thus be landed with zero forward speed while it still has immense wingspeed, unlike any fixed/flex wing that cannot fly (or land) slower than its stall speed. Also the high wing loading (wing speed = learjet's) allows us to fly in much more turbulance and wind than a fixed wing is comfortable or safe with.
Forgive my rattling on but I am very keen on Gyro's in general and feel the more informed you are the better decisions you take. In the end its about why some of us drive toyota's and others merc's. Horses for courses and fitness for purpose.
I echo that you would go a long way to meet a nicer bunch of guys than microlight aviators!
Rgds