Bill 
                                                      and Judy looked at the 
                                                      track record being 
                                                      established by their wing 
                                                      and decided the next 
                                                      obvious move was to build 
                                                      their own high performance 
                                                      airplane around that wing. 
                                                      They wanted an airplane 
                                                      that could successfully 
                                                      bump heads with Sukhois 
                                                      and Extras. That meant 
                                                      going to a six cylinder, 
                                                      I0-540 in place of the 
                                                      Lazer's 0-360. There are 
                                                      lots of places in 
                                                      everyone's mechanical life 
                                                      where the only logical 
                                                      solution for a situation 
                                                      is a healthy dose of cubic 
                                                      inches. Or a bigger 
                                                      hammer.
                                                      By the 
                                                      time Zivko Aeronautics was 
                                                      getting ready to start 
                                                      into their own airplane 
                                                      project, they were already 
                                                      a production shop which 
                                                      had a client list 
                                                      including names like 
                                                      Tinker Air Force base, Leo 
                                                      Loudenslager and a most 
                                                      interesting client named 
                                                      Aurora Flight Sciences. 
                                                      Aurora's products were 
                                                      ultra-high altitude, 
                                                      unmanned aircraft which 
                                                      were aimed at doing all 
                                                      sorts of environmental 
                                                      surveying up where manned 
                                                      aircraft were nearly 
                                                      useless. These aircraft 
                                                      were designed to work 
                                                      between 80,000 and 100,000 
                                                      feet while carrying 
                                                      payloads that sniffed the 
                                                      atmosphere for bad stuff 
                                                      or could loiter on top a 
                                                      hurricane for most of its 
                                                      life cycle. They measure 
                                                      their loiter times in 
                                                      days, not hours! The 
                                                      current production 
                                                      aircraft, the Perseus B 
                                                      has a loiter time that can 
                                                      be extended up to four 
                                                      complete days. They can do 
                                                      global-scale chemistry 
                                                      surveys over nearly half 
                                                      the earth's circumference 
                                                      in one flight.
                                                      
                                                      Obviously these airplanes 
                                                      are special purpose and 
                                                      rely on light weight and 
                                                      long wings to do their 
                                                      thing. And that's where 
                                                      Zivko Aeronautics comes 
                                                      into the picture. The huge 
                                                      (59 foot) wings wouldn't 
                                                      be possible without 
                                                      composites and Zivko built 
                                                      not only the wings, but 
                                                      all composite components 
                                                      including the tail and 
                                                      fuselage as well.
                                                      
                                                      
                                                      There 
                                                      are a lot of composite 
                                                      fabrication companies in 
                                                      the world that could build 
                                                      the components, so it says 
                                                      something that Zivko 
                                                      aced-out many much larger 
                                                      companies.
                                                      With 
                                                      their moves into the big 
                                                      time world of composite 
                                                      engineering, a full-time 
                                                      engineer, Todd Morse (his 
                                                      great grandfather invented 
                                                      the code), was added to 
                                                      the staff along with 
                                                      complete CADCAM 
                                                      capabilities. All of this 
                                                      experience and 
                                                      capabilities were brought 
                                                      to bear on their unlimited 
                                                      bird, the EDGE 540.
                                                      The 
                                                      heart of any aerobatic 
                                                      airplane is the wing, 
                                                      which in this case is 
                                                      probably one of the most 
                                                      carefully designed and 
                                                      manufactured wings in the 
                                                      country. Zivko prides 
                                                      itself in quality control 
                                                      and details. They go so 
                                                      far as using raw materials 
                                                      that each carry their own 
                                                      verified certifications 
                                                      which are kept on file for 
                                                      each component made. Each 
                                                      lay-up has its own sign-up 
                                                      sheet so it can be 
                                                      verified later that it was 
                                                      laid-up at a given angle, 
                                                      done by a specific 
                                                      individual and signed off 
                                                      as being correct by an 
                                                      inspector. Every single 
                                                      step from the 
                                                      manufacturing of the raw 
                                                      materials to the final 
                                                      paint coat is carefully 
                                                      documented and inspected.
                                                      The 
                                                      skin itself is glass with 
                                                      a foam core stabilizing 
                                                      the skin. The ribs are 
                                                      Nomex filled, carbon fibre 
                                                      layups and the spars are 
                                                      mostly carbon fibre. The 
                                                      layups are done in a clean 
                                                      room that doubles as a 
                                                      paint booth and curing is 
                                                      done in Zivko's own 26 
                                                      foot long oven.
                                                      The 
                                                      fuselage is relatively 
                                                      traditional, having 
                                                      evolved from the Lazer 
                                                      with careful attention 
                                                      paid to those areas where 
                                                      several decades of 
                                                      competition have revealed 
                                                      weak points. This is 
                                                      another area in which 
                                                      Zivko took advantage of 
                                                      those experts who know 
                                                      what works and what 
                                                      doesn't. They carefully 
                                                      documented the histories 
                                                      of performers and 
                                                      competitors who are flying 
                                                      similar types of tubing 
                                                      structures and noted where 
                                                      they were having problems. 
                                                      Then they sat down with 
                                                      their own computers and 
                                                      proceeded to design an 
                                                      entirely new fuselage 
                                                      which hopefully eliminated 
                                                      all those problems. 
                                                      Although the fuselage 
                                                      looks to be a Lazer 
                                                      derivative, it is actually 
                                                      a completely new, computer 
                                                      designed structure.
                                                      Next in 
                                                      their development program 
                                                      will be replacing the 
                                                      wire-braced empennage with 
                                                      a completely composite 
                                                      unit.
                                                      Weight, 
                                                      weight and weight are the 
                                                      first three factors 
                                                      constantly nagging at the 
                                                      mind of any aerobatic 
                                                      designer. Lowering the 
                                                      weight is the same as 
                                                      gaining free horsepower 
                                                      and in competition, every 
                                                      ounce counts. In the case 
                                                      of the Edge 540, the quest 
                                                      for ever-lower weight 
                                                      brought composites into 
                                                      play in many areas other 
                                                      than primary structures.
                                                      
                                                      
                                                      
                                                      Practically every external 
                                                      fairing which would 
                                                      normally be made of 
                                                      aluminium is carbon fibre. 
                                                      This includes the turtle 
                                                      deck, canopy frame and 
                                                      even the instrument panel. 
                                                      The cowling, complete with 
                                                      nose bowl and all 
                                                      fasteners barely weights 
                                                      12 pounds which shows the 
                                                      concept does work.
                                                      The 
                                                      super slick and tight 
                                                      fitting canopy frame 
                                                      doesn't have a bolt or 
                                                      screw showing because the 
                                                      canopy, as well as all 
                                                      Plexiglas panels, is all 
                                                      bonded in place rather 
                                                      than being bolted. This 
                                                      makes for light, rigid 
                                                      installations that can be 
                                                      replaced by simply sanding 
                                                      the back of the mounting 
                                                      flange away and bonding in 
                                                      a new piece.
                                                      The 
                                                      engine in the EDGE 540 we 
                                                      flew was powered by a 
                                                      mildly tuned Monte 
                                                      Barrett, parallel valve 
                                                      IO-540 pushing about 310 
                                                      hp (dyno verified) into 
                                                      the air via an MT 
                                                      three-blade. In the Edge 
                                                      540 kits or finished 
                                                      aircraft, the propeller of 
                                                      choice would be a 
                                                      three-blade, composite 
                                                      Hartzell.
                                                      The net 
                                                      result of all their 
                                                      attention to detail is an 
                                                      unlimited aerobatic 
                                                      airplane with a 20 G wing 
                                                      that, in the case of the 
                                                      example we flew, barely 
                                                      weights 1170 pounds. With 
                                                      a normal aerobatic weight 
                                                      of 1527 pounds, that puts 
                                                      the power loading at under 
                                                      5 lbs/hp. No wonder it is 
                                                      such a rocketship!
                                                      The 
                                                      price of a complete kit, 
                                                      minus the usual engine and 
                                                      all other kit stuff that 
                                                      isn't usually included, is 
                                                      $57,052, which includes 
                                                      every single option 
                                                      including having the wing 
                                                      pre-mounted to the 
                                                      fuselage and all tubing 
                                                      finished, painted and 
                                                      pre-oiled. This also 
                                                      includes the wing tank 
                                                      option that gives an 
                                                      additional 33 gallons over 
                                                      the 19 gallons in the 
                                                      fuselage tank. Zivko 
                                                      stresses that even though 
                                                      they've done much of the 
                                                      work there is still a fair 
                                                      amount of work to be done 
                                                      by a builder. They view 
                                                      their kit as being half 
                                                      way between a plans-built 
                                                      airplane and a true, 
                                                      ready-to-assemble kit.
                                                      
                                                      Incidentally, of the total 
                                                      price, $18,995 is for the 
                                                      basic wing which can also 
                                                      be fitted to your old 
                                                      Lazer fuselage, should you 
                                                      have an extra one laying 
                                                      around.
                                                      
                                                      
                                                      Mark 
                                                      Pfiefler, an airshow 
                                                      performer and professional 
                                                      pilot from the Oklahoma 
                                                      City area not only loaned 
                                                      us his airplane for the 
                                                      pilot report, but did the 
                                                      flying during the photo 
                                                      session. He showed a 
                                                      tremendous amount of 
                                                      patience and self control 
                                                      in hiding his apprehension 
                                                      at having someone else fly 
                                                      his "baby", although those 
                                                      watching during the flight 
                                                      said he was pacing the 
                                                      ramp like an expectant 
                                                      father. Can't say as we 
                                                      blame him.
                                                      A 
                                                      walk-around on the 
                                                      airplane shows the 
                                                      standard stuff expected of 
                                                      an unlimited airplane 
                                                      except you seldom see it 
                                                      done this well. The gaps 
                                                      at the back of the canopy 
                                                      combing, for instance, 
                                                      couldn't have been .025" 
                                                      and were absolutely even 
                                                      from one end to the other. 
                                                      Ditto the cowling or 
                                                      anywhere else anything 
                                                      came together. The turtle 
                                                      deck combing flowed down 
                                                      around the vertical fin 
                                                      and was finished with a 
                                                      neatly detailed little 
                                                      window that put the 
                                                      elevator horn in full view 
                                                      for pre-flighting. A nice 
                                                      touch!
                                                      
                                                      Saddling up, it became 
                                                      immediately obvious Mark 
                                                      had the cockpit tailored 
                                                      just for him and he is 
                                                      mostly legs. Long ones! 
                                                      Bill Zivko had to get in 
                                                      there with one of his guys 
                                                      and adjust the rudder 
                                                      pedals back so I could 
                                                      come even close to getting 
                                                      full rudder.
                                                      Locking 
                                                      the canopy down, I cranked 
                                                      the engine, paying 
                                                      particular attention to 
                                                      Mark's directions for a 
                                                      hot start. The big 
                                                      Lycoming caught on the 
                                                      third time around and 
                                                      showed no indication of 
                                                      stumbling when the mixture 
                                                      went in.
                                                      The 
                                                      Haig locking tailwheel was 
                                                      controlled by a plastic 
                                                      coated cable stretched 
                                                      back from the vertical 
                                                      piece of tubing just under 
                                                      the throttle. Hook a 
                                                      finger around the cable 
                                                      and pull and the tailwheel 
                                                      was full swivelling. Leave 
                                                      the cable alone and the 
                                                      wheel was locked straight 
                                                      forward. It was a nice, 
                                                      fool proof arrangement, 
                                                      although I still prefer 
                                                      steerable tailwheels.
                                                      As I 
                                                      lined up on the runway 
                                                      centreline, I was pleased 
                                                      to see I could see. Unless 
                                                      you've flown some of the 
                                                      mid-wing monoplanes with 
                                                      the low canopies you don't 
                                                      realize how blind the 
                                                      pilot is. The wing usually 
                                                      covers most of the 
                                                      pavement. The Zivko 540 is 
                                                      a long ways from being a 
                                                      C-172 in the visibility 
                                                      department, but it's not 
                                                      nearly as blind as some of 
                                                      the other unlimited. I had 
                                                      enough of the 75 foot wide 
                                                      Guthrie runway in sight I 
                                                      relaxed. Until that point 
                                                      I had been really worried 
                                                      about the landing. Now I 
                                                      was only apprehensive.
                                                      The 
                                                      takeoff wasn't so much a 
                                                      takeoff as it was a cat 
                                                      shot off a concrete deck. 
                                                      One second I was beginning 
                                                      to move the throttle and 
                                                      the next I was clocking 
                                                      100 knots and going up at 
                                                      an angle that has to be 
                                                      seen to be believed. 
                                                      Everything about the 
                                                      experience was immediate. 
                                                      The engine spooled up the 
                                                      instant the throttle moved 
                                                      and the airplane reacted 
                                                      just as instantaneously. 
                                                      Left hand moving forward, 
                                                      airplane moving easily 
                                                      twice that fast, runway 
                                                      flashing past, brain 
                                                      telling my right hand to 
                                                      be gentle in bringing the 
                                                      tail up and the long hand 
                                                      on the altimeter started 
                                                      flashing in a circle.
                                                      By the 
                                                      time we were off the 
                                                      ground and I glanced 
                                                      inside, the airspeed was 
                                                      blasting past 110 knots 
                                                      and it was all I could do 
                                                      to keep it down to 120. 
                                                      Actually, I was well out 
                                                      of the pattern before I 
                                                      realized the airspeed was 
                                                      in knots, not mph, 
                                                      otherwise I would have 
                                                      pulled the nose into an 
                                                      even more ridiculously 
                                                      steep attitude to keep it 
                                                      down. As it was, I timed 
                                                      the rate of descent at 
                                                      something over 3,500 fpm. 
                                                      Now that calls for 
                                                      exclamation marks!
                                                      The 
                                                      instant the gear left the 
                                                      ground I could feel the 
                                                      ailerons in my hand. I 
                                                      don't mean I could feel 
                                                      the airplane moving, I 
                                                      mean I felt the ailerons, 
                                                      as if their trailing edges 
                                                      were nested in my palm and 
                                                      I could sense their 
                                                      tiniest movement and the 
                                                      airplane instantly 
                                                      reacted. This is not an 
                                                      airplane for those of 
                                                      heavy hand. But, even at 
                                                      that early stage I could 
                                                      tell the stick ratio was 
                                                      long enough the airplane 
                                                      didn't feel twitchy.
                                                      As 
                                                      quickly as the airplane 
                                                      responds to a control 
                                                      input of any kind it would 
                                                      have been easy for the 
                                                      airplane to have been like 
                                                      trying to balance on a 
                                                      bongo board (those things 
                                                      where you try to stand on 
                                                      a board balanced on a 
                                                      roller). The stick ratios 
                                                      eliminate that feeling 
                                                      almost completely. Al 
                                                      though the perceived 
                                                      pressures might as well be 
                                                      zero, they are so light, 
                                                      the stick has to move far 
                                                      enough that the pilot has 
                                                      total control and is able 
                                                      to really fine tune his 
                                                      movements.
                                                      It also 
                                                      didn't have any breakout 
                                                      forces to speak of, in any 
                                                      direction. In fact, a 
                                                      minute or so later when 
                                                      levelling out at 4,000 
                                                      feet, I was treated to a 
                                                      unique control feel. It 
                                                      was unique because all 
                                                      stick force gradients were 
                                                      perfectly flat. Perfectly 
                                                      flat. The forces in any 
                                                      direction didn't seem to 
                                                      change at all regardless 
                                                      of how far I displaced the 
                                                      stick. In pulling "G", the 
                                                      stick force felt the same 
                                                      all the way through. The 
                                                      pressure at full aileron 
                                                      deflection was the same as 
                                                      barely starting a turn. 
                                                      The pressures also didn't 
                                                      change with speed.
                                                      It was 
                                                      hard to get full aileron 
                                                      deflection because the 
                                                      airplane whipped around so 
                                                      fast, that by the time you 
                                                      could get the stick up 
                                                      against a knee the 
                                                      airplane would already be 
                                                      right side up. The roll 
                                                      rate has been timed at 420 
                                                      degrees, which is enough 
                                                      to blur the horizon. This 
                                                      is especially true in 
                                                      doing vertical rolls. I've 
                                                      never been especially good 
                                                      in the vertical, but it 
                                                      goes around so fast you're 
                                                      into the second one before 
                                                      you know you've come close 
                                                      to finishing the first 
                                                      one.
                                                      Does it 
                                                      stop while rolling? On my 
                                                      first vertical I thought 
                                                      I'd do a quick half roll 
                                                      to see how it felt. Blur! 
                                                      Twitch the stick back the 
                                                      other way to stop and my 
                                                      head bumped the side of 
                                                      the canopy as the airplane 
                                                      slammed to a halt. Crisp 
                                                      is hardly the word for it!
                                                      A lot 
                                                      of airplanes that have 
                                                      light control pressures in 
                                                      pitch will be asymmetric 
                                                      in their behaviour. 
                                                      They'll be light when 
                                                      positive but it takes a 
                                                      healthy arm to get much 
                                                      negative G on the 
                                                      airplane. This is 
                                                      absolutely not the case 
                                                      with the Edge, it comes as 
                                                      close to being the same 
                                                      outside as inside as any 
                                                      I've seen. It takes a 
                                                      little more arm, but only 
                                                      a little and just a touch 
                                                      of trim lets it fly hands 
                                                      off inverted. This made 
                                                      manoeuvres like rolling 
                                                      360's a whole lot less 
                                                      work.
                                                      The way 
                                                      the airplane handled when 
                                                      slow is at least as 
                                                      impressive as how it 
                                                      handled the fast stuff. 
                                                      Pulling out of the tops of 
                                                      verticals, I was being 
                                                      ginger, just letting it 
                                                      zero G its way over. The 
                                                      big engine let me do 
                                                      anything at that point 
                                                      because I was purely 
                                                      ballistic, just a 
                                                      passenger behind a 
                                                      whirling MT. At one point 
                                                      I bought the power back 
                                                      while pulling over the top 
                                                      at zero speed waiting to 
                                                      see what it would do. It 
                                                      didn't do anything. It 
                                                      kept on pulling. At least 
                                                      twice I found myself 
                                                      messing around at speeds 
                                                      around 30 mph, full back 
                                                      stick and still flying 
                                                      around the corner because 
                                                      I was low on G. Then I got 
                                                      down just over stall and 
                                                      honked into a hard corner 
                                                      trying to stall it. It 
                                                      would buffet a little but 
                                                      not do anything unusual. 
                                                      Then I'd unload, hit the 
                                                      power and go shooting 
                                                      straight ahead like out of 
                                                      a sling shot. Coming out 
                                                      of a slow speed situation, 
                                                      it acts as if it has JATO 
                                                      bottles.
                                                      
                                                      Incidentally, a couple of 
                                                      times I played with the 
                                                      power while going vertical 
                                                      down hill to see what the 
                                                      prop would do. I pulled 
                                                      the power all the way back 
                                                      and even though I was 
                                                      pointed straight down, the 
                                                      prop would flatten out, 
                                                      airplane would slow down 
                                                      and I'd slide forward into 
                                                      the straps. Later, while 
                                                      shooting landings, I got a 
                                                      kick out of the way the 
                                                      big prop acted like a 
                                                      spoiler. Just a touch of 
                                                      power would keep the 
                                                      blades from flattening 
                                                      out, but pull the power 
                                                      and it acted like drag 
                                                      chute.
                                                      The 
                                                      first flight of any 
                                                      airplane is a tentative 
                                                      meeting of friends, you 
                                                      circle around one another 
                                                      trying to figure out the 
                                                      best approach. That's why 
                                                      a second meeting is always 
                                                      a must. You've had time to 
                                                      think about the first 
                                                      meeting and you've got all 
                                                      sorts of ideas about the 
                                                      second. Unfortunately, I 
                                                      only had time for one 
                                                      flight in the EDGE 540 
                                                      which is no way to judge 
                                                      an unlimited aerobatic 
                                                      airplane. Assuming, that 
                                                      is, I was capable of 
                                                      judging it in the first 
                                                      place, which I'm not. I 
                                                      doubt if there are 25 
                                                      pilots in the entire world 
                                                      capable of truly saying 
                                                      how well the airplane 
                                                      stacks up against the 
                                                      unlimited hot dogs and I'm 
                                                      not one of them.
                                                      Judging 
                                                      from the tapes I've seen 
                                                      of Kirby Chambless flying 
                                                      his Edge 540 at Fond du 
                                                      Lac, there seems to be 
                                                      little doubt the airplane 
                                                      can do some amazing stuff, 
                                                      including hovering at zero 
                                                      airspeed.
                                                      It 
                                                      would be nice to see 
                                                      something like the Edge 
                                                      make a serious mark for 
                                                      itself. It's American born 
                                                      and bred and comes out of 
                                                      a small shop tended to by 
                                                      loving hands. In a wildly 
                                                      three-dimensional sort of 
                                                      way, the Edge 540 and 
                                                      Zivko Aeronautics 
                                                      represent the best of the 
                                                      American spirit. Get an 
                                                      idea and make it happen! 
                                                      And that's exactly what 
                                                      the Zivkos are doing.