billwoodmason Posted August 13, 2015 Posted August 13, 2015 No matter how many testimonials have been sent to CASA about success stories of Jabiru owners it has all fallen on deaf ears. Constant pot stirring on social media by those with agendas and bombardment by competitors in disguise has taken it,s toll. Those in CASA who wish to make a name for themselves have taken the ball and run with it no matter what the outcome for Jabiru and those who own them. 4
Guest Ornis Posted August 13, 2015 Posted August 13, 2015 Well I'm impressed. At least one Jabiru engine in Australia still working. Are you sure?
gandalph Posted August 13, 2015 Posted August 13, 2015 Ah! The irony of such a comment from the land the iconic flightless bird. 2
Bruce Tuncks Posted August 13, 2015 Posted August 13, 2015 Hi Ornis, if i was a competitor or importer of another brand I'd write your sort of stuff, or at least get my contacts to do it. 1 1
Guest Ornis Posted August 13, 2015 Posted August 13, 2015 Bit sensitive about your junk engine, chaps? Just as well you have a government department to save you from yourselves... Is the Jabiru flightless? Just asking.
Jabiru Phil Posted August 13, 2015 Posted August 13, 2015 Ok, in your own opinion please explain your last sentence. Just wondering where you are coming from? Phil 2
Guest Ornis Posted August 13, 2015 Posted August 13, 2015 Just wondering where you are coming from? Perhaps this helps: No, old one still runs fine, just was looking at spending fair bit on it shortly - way too soon.Decided to upgrade to new one ... And this: We are here on earth to do good unto others. What the others are here for, I have no idea. ~ WH Auden
motzartmerv Posted August 13, 2015 Posted August 13, 2015 Yea come on ornis, that sort of thing doesn't help.
Jaba-who Posted August 13, 2015 Posted August 13, 2015 Yea comon ornis, that sort of thing doesn't help. Che?? " Yea comon ornis" ? Thinking this might have been a Latin quote for something profound I googled it. Nope. but it did send me to a bunch of webpages where women are discussing the ideal penis size. Am I missing something, Motz 1
motzartmerv Posted August 13, 2015 Posted August 13, 2015 sorry.. Typo. Have fixed it for you. Pretty sure you would have understood it tho ;)
Jaba-who Posted August 13, 2015 Posted August 13, 2015 Yep. I figured it was but it was too good a chance to pass up.
Oscar Posted August 14, 2015 Posted August 14, 2015 Is the Jabiru flightless? Just asking. Nope, even though they don't take off from water very well - even with a brand-new CAMit engine installed, (though just possibly, you know that better than most of us do). 1
Russ Posted August 14, 2015 Posted August 14, 2015 Ornis......ol chum, me....and a whole lot of other jab owners, fly all over this country. Guess what.......99.6% of the time, the only other rec flyer we bump into is ......another JAB.............that's right...99.6%.............so shove your...( edited ) Service them right, fly em right............they just purr. And that's another fact. ( geez......i've said all this before...as others have ) Ok....back to you......what machine do you yourself putt about in. ( curious ) russ 1 1
Russ Posted August 14, 2015 Posted August 14, 2015 Ornis......ol chum, me....and a whole lot of other jab owners, fly all over this country. Guess what.......99.6% of the time, the only other rec flyer we bump into is ......another JAB.............that's right...99.6%.............so shove your...( edited ) Service them right, fly em right............they just purr. And that's another fact. ( geez......i've said all this before...as others have ) Ok....back to you......what machine do you yourself putt about in. ( curious ) russ
gandalph Posted August 14, 2015 Posted August 14, 2015 Nope, even though they don't take off from water very well - even with a brand-new CAMit engine installed, (though just possibly, you know that better than most of us do). Ouch!
gandalph Posted August 14, 2015 Posted August 14, 2015 Nope, even though they don't take off from water very well - even with a brand-new CAMit engine installed, (though just possibly, you know that better than most of us do). Ouch!
Oscar Posted August 14, 2015 Posted August 14, 2015 Ouch! Hey, the fact that a NZ Jab 230, registration ORN, was destroyed by an evidently ham-fisted pilot stuffing up a beach take-off after having landed there through a botched new engine installation on its first flight with its 'new' engine, is no reason to suspect that our beloved Ornis was in any way connected. Jeez, given the world-wide hilarity at the obvious incompetence of whoever was the pilot in that particular case, one would have to be more than circumspect in making any such connection - and I certainly don't. A new CAMit engine was installed in that particular aircraft with a kink in the fuel delivery line that resulted in fuel starvation, thus causing the forced beach landing. That is obviously not something that would happen to such an experienced Jabiru pilot as Ornis. Far too many people would be all too ready to suggest that anyone exhibiting such lack of skill and judgement for the subsequent take-off should not be allowed to operate an aircraft - and perhaps especially one requiring care and prudence in the engine management area such as any Jabiru. Such a person might well have an axe to grind against Jabiru engines - and that is palpably not the case with Ornis, who seeks only to provide balance and sense to commentary on Jabiru engines. My comment was merely that as a member of the evidently close-knit New Zealand Jabiru-owning community, Ornis may well know more than we do about the circumstances of that spectacularly stupid occurrence. 1 5
Oscar Posted August 14, 2015 Posted August 14, 2015 Ouch! Hey, the fact that a NZ Jab 230, registration ORN, was destroyed by an evidently ham-fisted pilot stuffing up a beach take-off after having landed there through a botched new engine installation on its first flight with its 'new' engine, is no reason to suspect that our beloved Ornis was in any way connected. Jeez, given the world-wide hilarity at the obvious incompetence of whoever was the pilot in that particular case, one would have to be more than circumspect in making any such connection - and I certainly don't. A new CAMit engine was installed in that particular aircraft with a kink in the fuel delivery line that resulted in fuel starvation, thus causing the forced beach landing. That is obviously not something that would happen to such an experienced Jabiru pilot as Ornis. Far too many people would be all too ready to suggest that anyone exhibiting such lack of skill and judgement for the subsequent take-off should not be allowed to operate an aircraft - and perhaps especially one requiring care and prudence in the engine management area such as any Jabiru. Such a person might well have an axe to grind against Jabiru engines - and that is palpably not the case with Ornis, who seeks only to provide balance and sense to commentary on Jabiru engines. My comment was merely that as a member of the evidently close-knit New Zealand Jabiru-owning community, Ornis may well know more than we do about the circumstances of that spectacularly stupid occurrence.
billwoodmason Posted August 14, 2015 Posted August 14, 2015 CASA no doubt would be keen to claim this NZ incident as another Jab failure for their stats?. 1 2
billwoodmason Posted August 14, 2015 Posted August 14, 2015 CASA no doubt would be keen to claim this NZ incident as another Jab failure for their stats?.
Oscar Posted August 14, 2015 Posted August 14, 2015 Undoubtedly, if it had happened in Australia even though it was not a Jabiru engine. If Jabiru engines cannot operate without fuel, it is obviously their fault. Hell we even had the (then brand-new, coming to us with all the relevant aviation experience of running the animal shelter for the RSPCA in Canberra) CEO of RAA publicly stating that the out-of-fuel incident in Brisbane was another example of the failure of Jabiru engines - and 'one too many', at that. 1 1
Oscar Posted August 14, 2015 Posted August 14, 2015 Undoubtedly, if it had happened in Australia even though it was not a Jabiru engine. If Jabiru engines cannot operate without fuel, it is obviously their fault. Hell we even had the (then brand-new, coming to us with all the relevant aviation experience of running the animal shelter for the RSPCA in Canberra) CEO of RAA publicly stating that the out-of-fuel incident in Brisbane was another example of the failure of Jabiru engines - and 'one too many', at that.
Recommended Posts
Create an account or sign in to comment
You need to be a member in order to leave a comment
Create an account
Sign up for a new account in our community. It's easy!
Register a new accountSign in
Already have an account? Sign in here.
Sign In Now