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The Cessna
of the Ultralight Industry
The world’s largest
general aviation manufacturer
by Dan Johnson
This
article has been "reprinted with
permission " from Experimenter magazine.
 Once upon a time, when the ultralight
industry wasn’t even an industry, Quicksilver sold
more aircraft in one year than Cessna, Piper, and
Beechcraft combined! Yes, you read it
right. Quicksilver sold more of its simple little
aircraft than all three giants of the general
aviation (GA) industry.
This was
partly circumstantial; the GA industry was in a
serious funk, building hardly any airplanes by
normal measurements. Cessna and others licked
their collective liability wounds and turned their
attention to building bizjets. Shortly after
(1986), market leader Cessna ceased all building
of single-engine aircraft. Meanwhile, Quicksilver
sold well over 2,000 aircraft in a year’s time. It
was 1982, a year when you might say ultralight
aviation’s sign was on the rise.
Then the
aviation landscape began to change. Congress
granted the GA industry’s request for a liability
limit, and manufacturers began to build more
aircraft. The Quicksilver of today is smaller than
the big GA producers when measured by aircraft
delivered or the number of dollars generated by
these sales. In fact, the Southern California
company went through its own gut-wrenching changes
of management, ownership, location, and even flood
damage. Yet no one can deny that Quicksilver is
truly one of the all-time successful airplane
building companies. Best reports place the number
of Quicksilver aircraft manufactured and sold at
better than 20,000, a great many of which are
still flying successfully.
Its
Quicksilver’s MX II Sprint and MXL II
Sport models are unquestionably the number one
training ultralights in America today, a fact
regularly confirmed through surveys of
instructors. In the early ’90s, the GT series set
a new benchmark for well-engineered and thoroughly
documented aircraft. And even with tens of
thousands of Quicksilvers flying, the brand
possesses a sparkling safety record. Sure, some
accidents have happened. But the brand compares
well with any aircraft ever flown, and the number
of fatalities is surprisingly low (though,
admittedly, precise statistics are not available).
Ask anyone who’s been around ultralights very
long, and that person will confirm that the
Quicksilver MX series has one of the best sales
and safety records in aviation.
First Came
Eipper Formance Today it is either a
seriously underinformed ultralight enthusiast or
someone who just hasn’t paid attention to the
ultralight movement who does not instantly
recognize Quicksilver as a major light (powered)
aircraft company. So ubiquitous is the brand that
many accept the basic Quicksilver MX series as
THE definition of an ultralight. As one
example, Ultralight Flying! magazine’s logo
incorporates a generic shape that is clearly based
on a Quicksilver. To many outside of ultralight
aviation, this is the "Piper Cub" of ultralights.
The comparison hardly represents all ultralights
today, but the analogy works in the same way the
Cub image has worked for all light GA aircraft.
In the
beginning of its colorful history, Quicksilver was
a hang gliding company. First called Eipper
Formance, the trademark was a play on words that
joined the name of its principal founder, Dick
Eipper, with the words "high performance." During
the 1970s, Eipper (pronounced EYE-per) made
thousands of hang gliders including such memorable
models as the contest-winning Flexi III and the
first truncated tip glider, the Cumulus V.
One other
model Eipper manufactured was Bob Lovejoy’s
Quicksilver rigid wing glider. While most hang
gliders were tailless, delta-wing-shaped aircraft
that folded up into long tubes that could easily
be carried on a car roof, Quicksilver was
different. Its wings were a more conventional
Hershey bar shape, and it had a conventional tail.
The control system was based on supplemental
weight shift and was eminently simple.
In its day,
the Quicksilver hang glider developed a following
among so-called "rigid wing" enthusiasts (a
delta-wing hang glider is referred to as a "flex
wing"). Some of those buying a Quicksilver liked
the greater performance it offered in those days.
Others felt more secure with its tail. Still more
preferred to sit (rather than lie in a prone
position) and control the aircraft more
conventionally than by pure weight shift—though
all you did was weight shift in the first Quicks.
However,
delta-wing hang gliders slowly developed improved
performance and handling, and the lead Eipper
Formance’s Quicksilver enjoyed began to erode. The
company was slipping behind in the development of
new flex-wing hang glider designs, and the owners
of the successful operation read the writing on
the wall and chose to add power to the
Quicksilver.
Powered Hang
Gliders Powerplants began showing up on hang
gliders in the mid to late 70s, but conventional,
tailless hang gliders did not prove to be the best
platform for auxiliary power. The trike had yet to
be invented, and those who contemplated adding an
engine saw the Quicksilver hang glider as a better
combination.
As landing
gear had yet to be devised, early experimenters
literally ran their powered Quicksilvers into the
air boosted by tiny engines. The first Eipper
Formance setup employed small Chrysler
powerplants, sometimes two of them in line,
swinging one prop, plus a basic tricycle landing
gear. Later the Eipper company selected the Yamaha
15-horse engine that offered enough power and
reliability to gain new inertia for the idea of
powering hang gliders.
Throughout
this development, the four partners of Eipper
including Dick Eipper, Steve Wilson, Dave Cronk,
and Dave Muehl worked to make their company look
more attractive to potential buyers. About this
time, I visited the factory and saw—but did not
fly—the first powered Quicksilvers. My timing was
interesting, as within a few weeks a group led by
Lyle Byrum bought Eipper Formance and renamed it,
using Quicksilver as their corporate
logo.
Those first
Quicks were all single-seaters and all powered by
Yamaha engines. Two-seaters were still years away.
Quicksilvers used supplemental weight shift, which
moved the rudder by linking it via control lines
to the swing seat holding the pilot. This seat
moved freely in all directions. As you moved fore
and aft, you controlled pitch. As you moved to
either side, your weight movement had a minor
effect, but most lateral control came from moving
the rudder as you shifted your weight right or
left. Throttles were spring-loaded levers on one
downtube of the triangular-shaped control bar in
front of the seat. Remember, this was a hang
glider first, powered to attract hang glider
pilots. At the time, no one called themselves an
ultralight pilot, and no other market
existed.
For about
$3,995 you could buy a whole powered airplane
capable of delivering hours of enjoyable flights.
A market began to develop quickly, and
Quicksilvers led the race. Others built similar
designs, but they weren’t perceived as the
original, and most of them dropped out of
sight.
While the
designs were still supplemental weight shift, more
powerful engines arrived on the scene. The Cuyuna
430 added an extra dimension to Quicksilver flying
and opened the door to new models.
Hang Glider
Becomes an Ultralight Given a general
aviation background, Lyle Byrum (and partners)
wished to modify the Quicksilver with conventional
controls. They also added two-seat models for
training. The greater horsepower available enabled
such decisions. Combined with regular three-axis
handling, the theory was that more folks would
want to buy these good flying, low-cost
ultralights.
The first
three-axis Quicksilver became known as the MX
series, standing for Multiple aXis, which meant
that it had more conventional controls. I say
"more conventional" because they still weren’t
identical to a Cessna or Piper.
That first
Quicksilver MX had a control yoke that moved
surfaces on the wing and the tail, but not like
today’s Quicksilvers. When you turned the wheel
for left and right maneuvers, you moved the
rudder. Fore and aft movements operated the
elevator conventionally, but when you pushed the
rudder pedals, you raised spoilers on the
appropriate wing. It sounds confusing, but it
functioned much like regular controls. This is not
unusual in that slow flying ultralights have long
been rudder dominated. Had the yoke operated the
spoilers for lateral movement, pilots would not
have found it as effective.
I had a
chance to fly that very first Quicksilver MX in
late 1981. The occasion was the evening before
some 50 dealers descended on Quicksilver Aircraft
to be introduced to this new model. In those days,
the California-based Quicksilver factory was
located by an open patch of land that they used
for test flying. It was adequately large, but no
one told me about a ditch that ran across the
"runway" that I chose for landing. The ditch was
camouflaged by weeds and happened to be right
where I chose to touch down. The nosewheel passed
the ditch but both mains hit the far side of the
ditch quite firmly. Darn! It had been a good
approach into a short field, and I’d been pleased
at my early evening performance until the ditch
changed things.
It wasn’t
readily apparent, but I’d hit hard enough that the
load had been transmitted through the landing gear
downtubes and up to the king post, all of which
now had undesirable curves in them. With all their
dealers coming the next day, I scrambled with John
Lasko until midnight to remove and replace the
damaged parts so that everyone would see a proper
example of the company’s proud new model. This was
near the start of my flying career, and luckily,
it wasn’t the end of it.
The rest is
well-known history. Dealers and the flying
community embraced the MX model, and Quicksilver
went on to become a huge success. Throughout the
years, despite new entries by many companies, the
Quicksilver MX remained heavily responsible for
the company’s excellent sales
performance.
Later the MX
dropped the spoilers—which weren’t particularly
effective—and added ailerons, making the handling
very close to general aviation convention. Engines
moved from under the wing to on top of the wing to
back under but further aft. Tubing sizes enlarged
to better brace the wing and allow larger props.
Many changes along the years have significantly
improved Quicksilver models without altering its
basic shape or appeal.
In the latest
iteration of this long evolution, the Quicksilver
Sport 2S added struts in yet another bid to
interest those who believe struts are better than
cable bracing (though lots of reasons still exist
to use cable over struts, most notably, they are
lighter and have less drag).
Millennium
Quicksilvers Today, Quicksilver
Manufacturing is the latest in a string of names
based on the company’s leading Quicksilver MX
models. Led by new owners Carl Von Hirsch and
Manuel Perez who purchased the company in 1999,
Quicksilver’s mainstays continue to be the seven
models that had been previously established. These
include the single-place Sprint and Sport, the
extremely popular Sprint II and Sport II
two-seaters, and the newest model in the series
called Sport 2S (for struts). In all cases these
"original" Quicksilver aircraft include the
identifier "MX" as part of their official model
names. Eventually, the single-place GT 400
and the two-place, certificated GT 500
rounded out the line. The latter distinguished
itself by being the first sportplane certificated
in 1993 under the simplified Primary Category
certification scheme.
One might say
that Quicksilver’s line therefore comprises the MX
series and the GT series. The latter has not sold
as voluminously as the former, but both account
for hundreds and hundreds of aircraft.
Quicksilver
has also enjoyed wide international success, and
this continues even until today when, for example,
the European market has tended to move into
ultralights that are more kit-built aircraft than
true ultralights. In countries around the globe,
Quicksilver models satisfy the interest of
fly-for-fun enthusiasts.
The two Sprint
models are very simple yet sturdy open cockpit
aircraft that fly very slowly. In my flights in a
single-place Sprint, I once recorded a stall of
only 18 mph using two different airspeed
indicators to attempt some measure of accuracy
(difficult at such slow speeds). While many light
aircraft enthusiasts yearn for higher cruise
speeds, many others like myself thoroughly enjoy
slow speed flight. Sprint models cost less partly
by virtue of their single-surface wing—which is
also the main reason these models fly so slowly.
However, single-surface wings that excel at slow
speed flight due to their effective undercambering
also tend to handle more lightly. The single-place
Sprint sells for $8,995, certainly a modest amount
for an aircraft that comes complete and has an
excellent record of safety, performance, and
handling. The two-seat model, widely used for
training, sells for $12,995.
The
Quicksilver Sport series changes the equation by
making the wing double-surfaced. Many GA pilots
barely understand the difference, having never
seen a wing that was not double-surfaced. Yet this
is a standard difference among slow-flying
aircraft. Many hang gliders are single surface,
and in that sport they are usually referred to as
"recreational" models, whereas double-surface
gliders are sold for cross-country or contest
flying.
In the case
of the Quicksilver Sport models, the
double-surface wing (meaning a complete under and
lower surface with the wing structure hidden
inside) also produces somewhat faster speeds and
therefore somewhat crisper handling. A single-seat
Sport retails for $9,995, while the two-seat model
goes for $13,495. The latter is probably the
world’s single most popular training
ultralight.
In a clear
nod to the general aviation pilot, the newest
Sport—the 2S model—has struts and a beefier
landing cage construction. It looks somewhat more
conventional, and indeed its handling is even
closer to the Cessna or Piper standards. However,
it gains 100 pounds of weight to bring this look
and feel to pilots who believe cable bracing is
old-fashioned. (Note: The use of the 582 Rotax
engine accounts for some of the additional weight,
as the non-strutted models come with the 503.) The
Quicksilver Sport 2S sells for $15,995.
In the mid
1980s, Quicksilver engineers Tom Price and Dave
Cronk—the brain trust of Quicksilver
R&D—created the GT 400 model. This was
a tip-to-tip, nose-to-tail new design that
significantly broadened the appeal of the
Quicksilver brand name.
The GT 400
is, to this day, considered one of the world’s
"best" ultralights, as defined by its ability to
do everything quite well and to have virtually no
evil qualities. I cannot think of anyone who has
flown the 400 and not admired how it flew. Other
designs may do more in specific areas, but few
ultralights possess such wonderfully well-rounded
qualities. It has sold around 1,000 units and is
priced at $12,995 for the lightest edition and
close to $15,000 for a deluxe model that features
a larger nose pod and a windscreen that sweeps
gracefully up to the wing’s leading
edge.
Perhaps the
company’s crowning achievement is the GT 500, a
two-seat version of the GT 400
single-seater. Launched in the late 1980s, the
500 won FAA approval as the first aircraft to be
certificated under FAA’s then-new
sportplane program. The agency flew the aircraft
and reviewed documents in a highly compressed
six-week period leading up to the 1993 EAA
convention at Oshkosh, where the Type Certificate
was awarded to Quicksilver. As part of the
fast-track approval, FAA also certified the Rotax
582 engine that came with the GT 500. That engine
had never been certified previously and
represented quite a victory for the California
company.
While
Quicksilver has sometimes been faulted for not
developing newer (read: much different) models,
the MX series continues to be a success story in
ultralight and very light aviation. The GT series
has enjoyed less market success, but has generated
intensely loyal customers, some of whom buy new
400s or 500s to replace their old one.
In today’s
jam-packed ultralight and light aviation market
where dozens of interesting designs compete for
market share, Quicksilver remains one of the
market leaders. The company may never sell 2,000
aircraft in a single year again, but they are
likely to remain in front of the ultralight
parade.
Quicksilver Aircraft
Specifications (Note: All specs and performance
information have been provided by the factory.
Figures are unverified except as otherwise stated
in this article.)
| |
|-------------------------MX
series-----------------------| |
|--GT
series--| |
| Specification |
Sprint |
Sprint II |
Sport |
Sport II |
Sport II S |
GT-400 |
GT-500 |
|
Wingspan
(feet) |
28 |
32.75 |
28 |
32.75 |
30 |
30 |
30 |
|
Wing area
(square feet) |
156 |
180 |
156 |
180 |
174 |
156 |
155 |
|
Seating* |
1 |
2 -
SS |
1 |
2 -
SS |
2 -
SS |
1 |
2 -
Tan |
|
Empty
weight (pounds) |
250 |
325 |
254 |
330 |
430 |
306 |
485 |
|
Gross
weight (pounds) |
525 |
525 |
720 |
720 |
1,000 |
570 |
1,000 |
|
Fuel
(gallons) |
5 |
6 |
5 |
6 |
6 |
5 |
8.5 |
|
VNE speed
(mph) |
65 |
75 |
74 |
75 |
87 |
74 |
103 |
|
Cruise
speed (mph) |
35-50 |
35-55 |
35-55 |
40-60 |
40-65** |
35-70 |
45-80 |
|
Stall speed
(mph) |
24 |
27 |
27 |
32 |
34** |
27 |
39 |
|
Rate of
climb (fpm) |
900 |
545 |
850 |
595 |
500 |
1,000 |
650 |
|
Takeoff
roll (feet) |
65 |
100 |
75 |
155 |
240 |
75 |
220 |
|
Landing
roll (feet) |
60 |
75 |
70 |
75 |
220 |
100 |
260 |
|
Standard
Rotax engine |
447 |
503 |
447 |
503 |
582 |
447 |
582 |
|
Retail
price |
$8,995 |
12,995 |
9,995 |
13,495 |
15,995 |
12,995 |
26,995 |
*SS = side-by-side seating; Tan = tandem
seating **Estimated, no factory figure yet
released
For more information about these
aircraft: Quicksilver Manufacturing,
Inc. 42214 Sarah Way Temecula CA
92590 Tel: 909-506-0061 Fax:
909-506-1589 E-mail: Quick@pe.net Website:
www.QuicksilverAircraft.com
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