Forwarded by request -I saw your note on the Sonex Foundation Forum. I read it sometimes, the discussion and quality of content are much higher than most homebuilt discussion groups. In reading today I saw a post from someone named "ihab" who said he was part of ZBAG. Being a Zenith builder and flyer for more than 10 years I wanted to alert Sonex people to the history of ZBAG.
They emerged during the investigations of Zenith 601XL accidents. They took donations to fund their own investigation. The origins may have been from concerned builders, but the secret membership list allowed ZBAG to quickly also become a vehicle for disgruntled builders, Zenith competitors and ambulance chasers to attack Zenith. When the first engineer they hired came back and said there was nothing seriously wrong with the design, They let him go and found another. They had a conclusion they wanted, and were only looking for 'evidence' that supported it. ZBAG supported a tremendous amount of speculation that proved to be worthless. They didn't hurt Zenith, but they did successful scare off countless homebuilders from finishing and flying their plane. In my book, alerting builders with facts is the right thing to do, scaring anyone with speculation has no place in aviation.
I can not speak to Mr. "ihab"'s motivation, but doing something like collecting type accident statistics while not having any personal experience in the design, (evaluating stalls by one video) and offering to fund investigations into 'improvements' does not bode well. His comment "It should not be necessary for more people to die" Is the exact type of comment that lawyers fishing for an angle make. I am always alert for the motivation of anyone who falsely suggests mechanical failure or design are bigger culprits than judgment errors of pilots. You can't get rich suing dead pilots, but you can get money by going after companies and designers. Take a minute to read this:http://flycorvair.net/2013/01/28/expert-witnesses-in-civil-aviation-trials/
Lest anyone think I am against frank discussion, I have an entire section of our webpage for Risk Management
http://flycorvair.net/2014/01/21/risk-m ... ence-page/ . The stories are about real people I knew, and what we can learn from loosing them. The commentary isn't generalized speculation, I earned a bachelor's degree in accident investigation from Embry-Riddle 20 years ago.
If Zenith had been the hazard to builders that Mr."Ihab" suggests, they would have been sued out of existence in the last decade. Yet they are still here and going strong. After all the speculation was done, the issue came down to this 85% of their pilot pool could not identify the Va speed of the plane as 105mph, even though it was printed on the front page of the plans, and typical second owner/ gross judgment error issues. In the end they installed a very stout mod that essentially drove the Va higher than potential cruise. Look at this story for comments on the human factor issue:
http://flycorvair.com/601paper.html William Wynne