FYI,

Taken From Popular Science Mag. at 
http://www.popsci.com/popsci/aviation/article/0,12543,592736,00.html
I think it's a hopped up Dragonfly. Looks like a yellow banana.

Cory Bird, an engineer at Burt Rutan's remarkable aviation design shop, builds 
a composite-fiber airplane of Swiss-watch precision.

      by Stephan Wilkinson  


When a yellow two-seater called Symmetry flew for the first time in California 
last April, a machine that is very likely the most finely crafted handmade 
artifact of its type took to the air. Certainly I'd wager that Symmetry comes 
closer to perfection than any other homebuilt airplane in the world, and it 
deserves equal measures of admiration and incredulity. Admiration for the 
precision of the machine, incredulity for the obsession that produced it. This 
is technology as aviation art, from the hands of one man. 

I've seen a lot of homebuilts and made one myself -- an Italian-designed Falco 
that some people, stroking my ego, said was a pretty obsessively constructed 
beauty. Parked next to Symmetry, however, my spruce speedster would have looked 
like a sorry piece of plywood trash. And my "obsessiveness" would have seemed 
like slapdash carpentry compared to builder Cory Bird's pursuit of perfection. 

Quite simply, Symmetry is not only symmetrical but dead-nuts flawless. The 
airplane's fuselage is as lithe and sinuous as a tango dancer's outthrust leg. 
Its wings are literally as straight and true as a draftsman's steel rule. Next 
to its nine coats of hand-rubbed acrylic urethane (seven pigmented, two clear), 
the $60,000 paint jobs on many a concours-winning collector car would look like 
Earl Scheib re-sprays. Under harsh fluorescent hangar lights that would make 
even a brand-new Mercedes appear to have been painted with a broom, Symmetry 
reveals nary ripple nor flaw. 

When I first saw Symmetry, in its hangar at Mojave Airport in California's high 
desert, I peered into the uncowled engine compartment and marveled at the 
amount of extra machinery that extended back into the space between the 
four-cylinder, 200- horsepower Lycoming engine and what I assumed was the front 
of the cockpit -- hoses, tubing, pumps, wires, an extra pair of magnetos . . . 
260 MPH.

Wait a minute, extra magnetos? I realized that Symmetry's stainless-steel 
firewall had been polished to an absolute mirror finish and was simply 
reflecting the back of the engine, fooling my eye into seeing space where in 
fact there was hard steel. 

KRron


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