Retroaviation wrote:
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I personally saw the galvanized fence posts that were used as axles on the Zero, along with the copper refrigerator lines as hydraulic tubing.
But with all of the things being said about Mr. Deimert that will certainly be said here, you gotta admit that he's a clever fella. He came up with ways to make ol' airplanes fly that nobody else would've ever thought of. I'm not suggesting that all of those ways was correct, but they were certainly ingenious. That, and the fact that he was able to recover many, many airplanes from bizarre places all over the world, makes his aviation career interesting as well.
To me, he's kind of like a "Tallichet Light."
That's what I gathered as well. He used his own standards rather than follow those set in the aviation industry. When I saw the defender video, it appeared to me that the landing gear worked pretty well and the workmanship didn't look bad. So just not up to the correct standards.
The Val has pop rivets instead of the correct type, but pop rivets are being used in some of the homebuilts.
I didn't see the rumored masking tape offsets in the Zero video that people said were in the Val.
The question is how could the Zero look somewhat normal, but the Defender look like a very messed up ultralight? Almost like 2 different standards applied to 2 different aircraft..