Quik & Quik GT450 Aircraft Operating Instructions
29
th
March 2007
Issue 1
Page 52 of 68
The Power Units
Rotax 912
Rotax 912S
Type
4 stroke
4 stroke
CC
1211
1352
Power
80bhp/5,500rpm
100bhp/5,500 rpm
Ignition
Dual CDI
Dual CDI
Cylinders
4
4
Reduction
2.27:1
2.43:1
Fuel/oil mix
n/a
n/a
Fuel min. rating
95 RON
95 RON
The Rolling Chassis
The main structure of the trike is of square section high strength aluminium alloy tube. A rigid composite
tandem seat is fitted which locates onto the tubular seat frame. The seat incorporates a foldable backrest for
the front seat occupant.
The rear undercarriage comprises Chro-Mo steel alloy tubular wishbones with suspension by polyurethane
elastomer incorporated in the tubular aluminium alloy struts. The braked main wheels are accessible by
removing the quickly-detachable wheel spat fins.
The nose undercarriage is steerable and incorporates footrests and throttle/brake controls. A trailing link
elastomer suspension system is fitted.
The Fuel Tank and System
Fuel is fed from a single fuel tank mounted beneath the seats. The fuel system has a fuel cock and external
filter backed up by an internal strainer fitted to the end of the fuel tank pick-up pipe. External fuel pipes are
fire-resistant to a specification that meets British Civil Airworthiness Requirements - Section S.
The approximate calibration of the fuel tank is as follows:
% Tank Volume
Gauge Reading
0 to 15
0
16 to 27
1/8
28 to 41
¼
42 to 57
7/16
58 to 70
9/16
71 to 85
11/16
86 to 90
7/8
91 to 100
1
Before you place any reliance on your fuel gauge, you will need to calibrate the fuel gauge on your particular
aircraft. As is general practice in aviation, you should visually check the fuel tanks to confirm that the
contents match the fuel gauge reading before flying. When flying, use your watch to time the flight against
known fuel burn at a given rpm, and always leave plenty of fuel in reserve.
CAUTION
Damage may result on CDI engines if the engines are
turned over without the plug leads connected.
Never rely on the fuel gauge accuracy alone
when calculating flight distances left to run. A
forced landing due to running out of fuel could
result in injury or death.
WARNING
GG
!