  
                                                      Stephens 
                                                      Akro (Laser 200) 
                                                      
                                                      
                                                       
                                                      
       by Budd Davisson, courtesy of 
       www.airbum.com
                                                      
                                                      
                                                        
                                                      
      
      
                                                      
                                                      
                                                      
                                                      People in the know speak 
                                                      of the Stephens Akro in 
                                                      hushed and slightly 
                                                      fearful tones. It looms on 
                                                      the aerobatic horizon like 
                                                      the stranger come to town 
                                                      to teach the Pitts boys a 
                                                      thing or two about 
                                                      aerobatics. Is it a Pitts 
                                                      killer and is Leo 
                                                      Loudenslager the man to 
                                                      pull the trigger? 
                                                      
                                                      
                                                      Let's make it clear right 
                                                      now that I'm not the guy 
                                                      to answer that question. 
                                                      My name isn't Soucy, 
                                                      Herendeen, Hillard or 
                                                      Poberezny. Around the 
                                                      airport, I'm known as 
                                                      "Fumbles," and after an 
                                                      exciting week when I flew 
                                                      the Stephens Akro and the 
                                                      180-hp symmetrical Pitts, 
                                                      back to. back, I've 
                                                      decided that I wouldn't 
                                                      want to be in the ring 
                                                      with any of the big guys 
                                                      in either airplane. 
                                                      
                                                      
                                                      America has finally popped 
                                                      out on top of the 
                                                      international aerobatic 
                                                      pyramid for two reasons: 
                                                      because of our pilots and 
                                                      because Curtis Pitts 
                                                      builds airplanes for us 
                                                      instead of them. If we 
                                                      didn't have the Pitts, we 
                                                      probably wouldn't have the 
                                                      Nestorov Trophy either. 
                                                      Our team is a happy 
                                                      combination of superpilots 
                                                      flying superairplanes. But 
                                                      nothing stands still in 
                                                      competition, and since 
                                                      it's hard to build better 
                                                      men, improvement will come 
                                                      in the form of better 
                                                      machines. And if Clayton 
                                                      Stephens has anything to 
                                                      do with it, one of the 
                                                      machines will be his 
                                                      Stephens Akro. 
                                                      
                                                      
                                                      According to the legends 
                                                      filtering out of the San 
                                                      Fernando basin, the Akro 
                                                      exists because the late 
                                                      Margaret Ritchie wanted to 
                                                      beat Mary Gaffaney. 
                                                      Actually, Mrs. Ritchie 
                                                      wanted to beat everybody, 
                                                      but her clipped-wing, 
                                                      150-hp Taylorcraft just 
                                                      couldn't cut the mustard. 
                                                      Even with its big engine 
                                                      and symmetrical airfoil, 
                                                      it rolled too slowly and 
                                                      had to pull around too 
                                                      much fabric and tubing. 
                                                      Clayton Stephens, an 
                                                      aeronautical engineer 
                                                      trying to add spice to his 
                                                      aerospace career, came to 
                                                      her aid with his slide 
                                                      rule and drafting machine. 
                                                      
                                                      
                                                      Since Stephens wasn't, and 
                                                      isn't, an aerobatic pilot, 
                                                      he had to do the entire 
                                                      project with numbers and 
                                                      formulas. He had no 
                                                      prejudices or preconceived 
                                                      ideas. He looked at the 
                                                      maneuvers, studied the 
                                                      airplanes, and designed an 
                                                      airplane that broke the 
                                                      
                                                      
                                                      At that point in time, 
                                                      American aerobatic 
                                                      tradition dictated using 
                                                      two wings as the basis for 
                                                      any aerobatic design. The 
                                                      Akro, however, is a 
                                                      monoplane. 
                                                      
                                                      
                                                      Basically, the resulting 
                                                      design resembled an 
                                                      underdeveloped Formula One 
                                                      racer. As a matter of 
                                                      fact, part of the fuselage 
                                                      layout is supposed to have 
                                                      been inspired by Art 
                                                      Scholl's old Miss San 
                                                      Bernardino. In racing, the 
                                                      midwing layout was 
                                                      conventional, but in 
                                                      aerobatics, it was 
                                                      downright radical. If 
                                                      throwing away one wing 
                                                      didn't make the machine 
                                                      unique in the world of 
                                                      aerobatics, his airfoil 
                                                      did-it wasn't symmetrical! 
                                                      The modern development of 
                                                      superaerobatic airplanes 
                                                      requires that more and 
                                                      more attention be paid to 
                                                      outside manoeuvres. This 
                                                      means the wing should lift 
                                                      equally both ways, but the 
                                                      Stephens' doesn't. The 
                                                      airfoil is an old 
                                                      favourite, the 23012. I 
                                                      hate people who banter 
                                                      airfoil numbers around, 
                                                      but this time it's 
                                                      important. The 23000 
                                                      series airfoils don't lift 
                                                      the same upside down as 
                                                      right side up, so Stephens 
                                                      climbed out on a limb when 
                                                      it came to outside, or 
                                                      negative G, manoeuvres. 
                                                      
                                                      
                                                      The construction is 
                                                      absolutely conventional 
                                                      and straightforward. The 
                                                      wing is plywood 
                                                      covered-with a 24-foot, 
                                                      7-ply railroad tie running 
                                                      wing-tip to wingtip. The 
                                                      fuselage is miles of 
                                                      chrome moly and fabric. At 
                                                      first glance, the 
                                                      construction looks 
                                                      deceptively simple, but 
                                                      it's not. Laminating the 
                                                      spar requires that the 
                                                      builder construct a 
                                                      clamping table, 24 feet 
                                                      long and perfectly true. 
                                                      It's not difficult, but 
                                                      it's certainly not as 
                                                      simple as whittling out 
                                                      Pitts ribs and spars and 
                                                      letting the flying wires 
                                                      handle the problem of 
                                                      strength. Since it's a 
                                                      cantilever wing, you'd 
                                                      better be right the first 
                                                      time you build it, because 
                                                      there's no way to rig out 
                                                      any basement booboos once 
                                                      you're finished. Any twist 
                                                      in the wing is going to 
                                                      make the airplane fly like 
                                                      a cork-screw. 
                                                      
                                                      
                                                      Although there are at 
                                                      least six Stephens flying, 
                                                      Leo Loudenslager's is by 
                                                      far the most interesting 
                                                      and most advanced. Leo is, 
                                                      by his own admission, a 
                                                      total airplane freak. "I 
                                                      guess you'd have to say 
                                                      somebody is crazy to spend 
                                                      five years building and 
                                                      rebuilding an airplane," 
                                                      he grins. "I could have 
                                                      been much farther along if 
                                                      I'd built a proven 
                                                      machine, like the Pitts, 
                                                      but the second I saw the 
                                                      Akro, I knew this was it 
                                                      for me." 
                                                      
                                                      
                                                      Since he first started 
                                                      building his airplane, Leo 
                                                      has functioned as Clayton 
                                                      Stephen's eyes and hands. 
                                                      He has tested and modified 
                                                      the airplane, advising 
                                                      Stephens how the changes 
                                                      affected his manoeuvres, 
                                                      so plans could be changed 
                                                      accordingly. 
                                                      
                                                      
                                                      Walking around the 
                                                      airplane, you are aware 
                                                      that this is the 
                                                      embodiment of "form 
                                                      following function." The 
                                                      lines are so angular as to 
                                                      be harsh and the bubble 
                                                      cockpit really is a 
                                                      bubble, perched atop the 
                                                      skinny fuselage as if it 
                                                      were an afterthought. The 
                                                      horizontal tail has 
                                                      Buck-Rogers tip-plates 
                                                      added only recently to 
                                                      increase the elevator 
                                                      effectiveness without 
                                                      increasing the area. 
                                                      
                                                        
                                                      
                                                      
                                                      
                                                      The things trailing back 
                                                      from the wingtips are 
                                                      unnamed, but will probably 
                                                      be known eventually as 
                                                      LLLs (Loudenslager Line 
                                                      Layers). He can squint out 
                                                      at those weird looking 
                                                      little mobiles and tell 
                                                      when he's exactly vertical 
                                                      or at 45 degrees. Contests 
                                                      are won and lost on 
                                                      angles, so it probably 
                                                      won't be long before 
                                                      everything from Citabrias 
                                                      to Pitts start sprouting 
                                                      these things. 
                                                      
      
                                                      
                                                      
                                                      The first part of my 
                                                      checkout was aimed at 
                                                      getting me in the cockpit. 
                                                      I didn't want to walk on 
                                                      the wing, so I had to 
                                                      stand tiptoe on the step 
                                                      and stretch my other leg 
                                                      into the cockpit. Once I 
                                                      was inside, Leo explained 
                                                      things and mentioned that 
                                                      the cockpit was tailored 
                                                      for him, so I might find 
                                                      things not exactly where I 
                                                      wanted them. I saw what he 
                                                      meant when I tried the 
                                                      brakes. Because of a 
                                                      previous modification that 
                                                      lengthened the rudder 
                                                      pedals, the brakes were 
                                                      right up against the 
                                                      bottom of the tank. I was 
                                                      wearing a, pair of 
                                                      square-toed boots and I 
                                                      really had trouble with 
                                                      the pedals. 
                                                      
                                                      
                                                      I must've scared the pants 
                                                      off Leo when I taxied to 
                                                      the far end of the runway 
                                                      and then disappeared for 
                                                      10 minutes. On the way 
                                                      down the taxi-way, that 
                                                      big 200-hp Lycoming 
                                                      dragged me along at 20 
                                                      mph, even at idle. I'd try 
                                                      for the brakes, but the 
                                                      tailwheel was so sensitive 
                                                      that giant stabs at the 
                                                      brakes caused me to weave 
                                                      all over the place. 
                                                      Figuring fear was the 
                                                      better part of valour, I 
                                                      pulled the mixture and 
                                                      coasted to the end of the 
                                                      taxiway. I yanked my boots 
                                                      off, sat them on the wing 
                                                      and waited. Pretty soon 
                                                      Leo came around the bend; 
                                                      he was much calmer than I 
                                                      would have been in the 
                                                      same situation. With a 
                                                      couple flips of the prop, 
                                                      I was on my way again in 
                                                      my stocking feet. 
                                                      
                                                      
                                                      Visibility during run-up 
                                                      and while checking for 
                                                      traffic is fantastic. It 
                                                      was as though I were 
                                                      sitting on a bar stool on 
                                                      top of the wing. The 
                                                      cockpit isn't large enough 
                                                      to do a lot of romping 
                                                      around in, but it is far 
                                                      from tight, and I didn't 
                                                      even notice the main spar 
                                                      passing over my legs. A 
                                                      guy with longer legs or 
                                                      more girth might find the 
                                                      spar hitting him just 
                                                      below the knees, though. 
                                                      
                                                      
                                                      Leo had said not to worry 
                                                      about torque on takeoff, 
                                                      so I rammed the power in 
                                                      fairly rapidly. He was 
                                                      right. It tore down the 
                                                      white stripe with very 
                                                      little help from me. My 
                                                      feet didn't even get into 
                                                      the act, and I had barely 
                                                      gotten the tail off the 
                                                      ground when those long 
                                                      wings reached out and 
                                                      hoisted me up off the 
                                                      runway. The acceleration 
                                                      was fast, lightning fast, 
                                                      compared to most 
                                                      lightplanes, but it didn't 
                                                      have the heart-stopping 
                                                      surge of a Pitts. That 
                                                      could be because I was up 
                                                      and away in the Stephens 
                                                      at something like 65 to 70 
                                                      mph, while a Pitts usually 
                                                      stays on the runway longer 
                                                      than that. 
                                                      
                                                      
                                                      And was I ever going up! 
                                                      At 100 to 110 mph 
                                                      indicated, the runway and 
                                                      surrounding hills dropped 
                                                      away so fast it was almost 
                                                      frightening. On later 
                                                      takeoffs, I tried to hold 
                                                      90 mph and time the 
                                                      climbs. They came out 
                                                      around 2,700 to 2,800 fpm, 
                                                      for at least a 30- to 
                                                      40-degree angle. People on 
                                                      the ground said they could 
                                                      easily see the tops of the 
                                                      wings as I climbed---it 
                                                      climbs even faster than a 
                                                      Pitts. 
                                                      
                                                      
                                                      Except for the climbout, 
                                                      so far I felt as if I were 
                                                      strapped into a wildly 
                                                      hopped-up Citabria. It had 
                                                      been extremely stable and 
                                                      had an unusually familiar 
                                                      feeling. There was no 
                                                      strange-airplane syndrome, 
                                                      where everything is 
                                                      unfamiliar and hard to get 
                                                      used to. I felt as though 
                                                      I'd had 1,000 hours in it 
                                                      from the beginning. 
                                                      
                                                        
                                                      
                                                      
                                                      In cruise, it hops along 
                                                      at around 140 mph 
                                                      indicated (150 mph true) 
                                                      and handles like I'd hoped 
                                                      it would. There isn't 
                                                      anything among normal 
                                                      airplanes that favourably 
                                                      compares with it in 
                                                      straight-and-level flight, 
                                                      except possibly a Swift. 
                                                      The control pressures are 
                                                      light, lighter than a 
                                                      Pitts when fully 
                                                      deflected, but the stick 
                                                      travel is much greater. A 
                                                      little aileron calls for a 
                                                      little stick, and a lot of 
                                                      aileron demands a lot of 
                                                      stick. It feels as if the 
                                                      stick and the control 
                                                      surfaces are directly 
                                                      connected, without 
                                                      linkage, because the 
                                                      slightest movement of the 
                                                      stick provokes an 
                                                      instantaneous reaction. 
                                                      Since the wing is nothing 
                                                      more than an airfoiled 
                                                      slab with little or no 
                                                      dihedral, the airplane has 
                                                      no particular reason to 
                                                      stay in level flight, so 
                                                      it gimbals effortlessly 
                                                      about its centre of 
                                                      gravity. 
                                                      
                                                      
                                                      My total time in level 
                                                      flight consisted of two 
                                                      tight clearing turns in 
                                                      either direction, before I 
                                                      tucked the stick to one 
                                                      side and watched the 
                                                      horizon curl across the 
                                                      top of the canopy in a 
                                                      sensuous roll. From that 
                                                      point on, I must have 
                                                      looked like an aerial 
                                                      otter; I'd flop through a 
                                                      frantic series of 
                                                      manoeuvres, stop for a 
                                                      second, look quickly 
                                                      around for traffic, then 
                                                      start writhing around the 
                                                      sky again. 
                                                      
                                                      
                                                      In normal aerobatics, the 
                                                      Stephens Akro is a damned 
                                                      boring airplane. Loops, 
                                                      rolls and the mundane 
                                                      normal manoeuvres happen 
                                                      with the precision of a 
                                                      push-button machine. Pull, 
                                                      and you loop. Stick to one 
                                                      side, and you roll. Simple 
                                                      as that. Leo has a grease 
                                                      pencil X on the windshield 
                                                      that you can fly like a 
                                                      gun sight, and to keep 
                                                      that exactly where you 
                                                      want it demands only a 
                                                      little more technique. It 
                                                      makes sport aerobatics 
                                                      almost too easy. 
                                                      
                                                      
                                                      The second I pointed the 
                                                      nose straight up, I could 
                                                      see that the Stephens was 
                                                      going to be a mean 
                                                      airplane to beat in 
                                                      competition. It seemed to 
                                                      go uphill forever, and 
                                                      vertical rolls were a 
                                                      simple matter of putting 
                                                      one of the LLL attitude 
                                                      indicators on the horizon 
                                                      and slamming the aileron 
                                                      in. A little rudder and 
                                                      stick action was all that 
                                                      was needed to make the 
                                                      wingtips rip around the 
                                                      horizon. At first I was 
                                                      banging the stick hard 
                                                      against one leg, but I was 
                                                      whizzing around so fast 
                                                      that I would pass my 
                                                      starting point, do a 1'/4 
                                                      vertical and end up with 
                                                      too much speed. I found I 
                                                      could casually pull up 
                                                      from 180 mph and do a 
                                                      leisurely roll and still 
                                                      have plenty of speed to 
                                                      fly away inverted. From 
                                                      around 200 mph, I was 
                                                      trying to do vertical 
                                                      four-points, not one of my 
                                                      best  
                                                      
                                                      
                                                      
                                                      manoeuvres, 
                                                      and I was amazed at how 
                                                      easy it was to come 
                                                      banging to a halt every 90 
                                                      degrees, then start 
                                                      rolling just as quickly, 
                                                      heading for the next 
                                                      point. Boy, does this 
                                                      thing do vertical rolls!
      
                                                      
                                                      
                                                      The really surprising 
                                                      thing about its vertical 
                                                      performance is that it 
                                                      doesn't pick up speed too 
                                                      fast going down-hill. I 
                                                      guess gravity works the 
                                                      same for all airplanes, 
                                                      biplanes or other-wise, 
                                                      until aerodynamic drag 
                                                      raises its fuzzy head and 
                                                      .slows down the bi-planes 
                                                      as they go past 100-120 
                                                      mph. 
                                                      
                                                      
                                                      On my first inverted 
                                                      recovery out of a 
                                                      hammerhead, I banged the 
                                                      throttle a little too 
                                                      hard, and the added 
                                                      slipstream over the tail 
                                                      made it so effective that 
                                                      it felt as if the airplane 
                                                      stood still while the tail 
                                                      moved down. That was 
                                                      probably one of the 
                                                      squarest outside corners 
                                                      I've ever made. 
                                                      
                                                        
                                                      
                                                      
                                                      I don't know who said 
                                                      semi-symmetrical wings 
                                                      aren't supposed to work 
                                                      inverted, but he was wrong 
                                                      because the Stephens 
                                                      doesn't know right side up 
                                                      from upside down. The nose 
                                                      attitude inverted is as 
                                                      flat as a fritter, and I 
                                                      had to really work to make 
                                                      inverted turns without 
                                                      gaining attitude. 
                                                      
                                                      
                                                      As far as that goes, I 
                                                      gained altitude no matter 
                                                      what I did. I tried six or 
                                                      seven outside loops before 
                                                      I got one to come out at 
                                                      the same altitude. I kept 
                                                      gaining 300 to 500 feet in 
                                                      each. The controls are so 
                                                      incredibly effective at 
                                                      slow speeds that I could 
                                                      do half-outside, 
                                                      half-inside square loops 
                                                      with half rolls on each 
                                                      leg, and still not be 
                                                      going much over cruise 
                                                      speed on the way down. I 
                                                      tried to push up into a 
                                                      full vertical roll from 
                                                      inverted, but the top of 
                                                      my head started to come 
                                                      off so I chickened out. 
                                                      
                                                      
                                                      The snap rolls are 
                                                      blinding, blurring, 
                                                      whirling affairs that 
                                                      squeak to. a halt in an 
                                                      instant. Basically, they 
                                                      are simple: yank, stomp 
                                                      and hold onto your hat. I 
                                                      was snapping going up, 
                                                      down, across, everyway. 
                                                      
                                                      
                                                      The notes that come with 
                                                      the Stephens plans say it 
                                                      rolls at 180 degrees per 
                                                      second, which is exactly 
                                                      the same as a symmetrical 
                                                      "round-wing" Pitts, but I 
                                                      find that figure hard to 
                                                      believe. The Pitts seems 
                                                      faster than the Stephens. 
                                                      Of course, once you're 
                                                      rolling faster than about 
                                                      150 degrees a second (most 
                                                      aircraft are in the 60- to 
                                                      90-degree range), 
                                                      everything is a blur, 
                                                      anyway. 
                                                      
                                                      
                                                      Even though it was 
                                                      unintentional, I did a 
                                                      wild stall series in the 
                                                      Stephens: straight up, 
                                                      straight down, inside and 
                                                      outside, as I fell out of 
                                                      muffed  
                                                      
                                                      
                                                      
                                                      manoeuvres. 
                                                      Whenever it stalled, I 
                                                      felt as if I were standing 
                                                      on a four-foot square of 
                                                      plywood balanced on a 
                                                      bowling ball. When the 
                                                      wing unloaded, I never 
                                                      knew for sure in which 
                                                      direction it was going to 
                                                      go. It has a sharp break, 
                                                      but then mushes with one 
                                                      wing dropping. Kicked into 
                                                      a spin, it goes around 
                                                      like a Fourth of July 
                                                      pinwheel-faster, it seems, 
                                                      than a Pitts and harder to 
                                                      stop.
      
                                                      
                                                      
                                                      On the way down, I timed 
                                                      the rate of descent at 
                                                      approach speed (80 mph) 
                                                      and found it to be around 
                                                      800 to 900 fpm, about like 
                                                      a Cherokee. What I 
                                                      couldn't measure, and 
                                                      didn't even notice until I 
                                                      got into the pattern, was 
                                                      the glide ratio. The 
                                                      airplane is so clean that 
                                                      it goes and goes. I shot 
                                                      three or four landings, 
                                                      making each pattern bigger 
                                                      and bigger, and even with 
                                                      no power, I ended up 
                                                      slipping to get the thing 
                                                      down. That's an area where 
                                                      the Pitts definitely loses 
                                                      out. A Pitts comes down 
                                                      like a manhole cover with 
                                                      a drag chute. 
                                                      
                                                      
                                                      Landings are absolutely 
                                                      beautiful, whether on the 
                                                      mains or in a three-point. 
                                                      The gear is exactly as 
                                                      stiff as it should be, and 
                                                      the tailwheel and rudder 
                                                      are effective enough to 
                                                      control, but not so 
                                                      sensitive that they get 
                                                      you in trouble. Since it 
                                                      stalls at around 50 mph, 
                                                      you can be on the ground 
                                                      at a near walk, with a 
                                                      clear view in front of you 
                                                      at all times. It's almost 
                                                      like landing a Cessna 150. 
                                                      
                                                      
                                                      On my last landing, I 
                                                      still doubted my ability 
                                                      to get the brakes on 
                                                      without damaging my 
                                                      bunions, so I cut the 
                                                      mixture as soon as I 
                                                      touched and rolled to a 
                                                      halt. As I pulled the 
                                                      canopy open, Leo trotted 
                                                      up grinning. All I could 
                                                      say was "Doesn't this 
                                                      thing do anything wrong?" 
                                                      
                                                      
                                                      You're probably begging me 
                                                      now to say, "Yes, it's 
                                                      better than a Pitts," or 
                                                      "No, the Pitts is still 
                                                      king." But I'm not going 
                                                      to say either, and I'm not 
                                                      copping out. The Stephens 
                                                      and the Pitts each has its 
                                                      own character and 
                                                      manoeuvres at which it 
                                                      excels. In the Pitts, for 
                                                      instance, it takes some 
                                                      work to figure out how to 
                                                      hammerhead properly, but 
                                                      once you get the hang of 
                                                      it, it pivots as it you've 
                                                      driven a nail through the 
                                                      rudder post. The Stephens 
                                                      won't pivot that way. It's 
                                                      an easier airplane for the 
                                                      new pilot (me) to control 
                                                      because the control ratios 
                                                      are longer, requiring more 
                                                      input per  
                                                      
                                                      
                                                      
                                                      manoeuvre, 
                                                      which makes it less 
                                                      twitchy looking. They are 
                                                      two different airplanes, 
                                                      so they are bound to fly 
                                                      differently.
                                                      
                                                      
                                                      When all is said and done, 
                                                      it comes back down the 
                                                      pilot. There aren't 20 
                                                      pilots in the U.S. who 
                                                      would be able to 
                                                      capitalize on the 
                                                      difference between the two 
                                                      airplanes-they are so 
                                                      closely matched. I think, 
                                                      though, that the two would 
                                                      make pilots develop 
                                                      different styles; the 
                                                      Pitts encourages a quick, 
                                                      zippy sequence, while the 
                                                      Stephens evokes a smooth 
                                                      and ballet-like 
                                                      performance. But, either 
                                                      airplane is capable of 
                                                      doing everything the other 
                                                      can, and either will eat 
                                                      the European machines 
                                                      alive. Put a champion in 
                                                      either airplane and he 
                                                      would still be a champion. 
  
                              
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