Murphy JDM-8 explained

The Murphy JDM-8 is a Canadian single-seat ultralight monoplane designed by Daryl Murphy. The type was intended to be sold as a kit for home construction by Murphy Aircraft of Chilliwack, British Columbia.[1]

The designation indicates the designer's initials, J. Daryl Murphy and his eighth design.

Design and development

Work was begun on the JDM-8 design in December 1998, but the project was not a high priority and so did not fly until March 2001. The aircraft was first publicly shown at Sun 'n Fun 2000 when it was not yet complete.

The JDM-8 is an all-metal low-wing cantilever monoplane designed in two variants, one to meet the American FAR 103 Ultralight Vehicles regulations and one for the non-American markets particularly Canada and Europe. The JDM-8 has a conventional landing gear with a tailwheel and can be powered by a Rotax engine from 20-80HP. An unusual feature is the upwards folding wing for storage and transportation.

The fuselage of the JDM-8 is of semi-monocoque aluminum construction. The 50NaN0 fuel tank is located in front of the instrument panel. The conventional main landing gear for the ultralight version is bungee suspended and includes brakes, while the main landing gear of the homebuilt version is of a sprung design. The tail wheel spring is of 4140 steel and incorporates an inline skate wheel.

The JDM-8 wing is constructed with an aluminum D-cell leading edge incorporating a 90NaN0 high C-channel main spar made from 6061-T6 grade aluminum. The rear spar is a similar C-channel that is 51NaN1 high and there is a third nose spar that is 31NaN1 in height. The wing aft of the D-cell is covered in aircraft fabric and has a modified NACA 4415 airfoil with a drooped trailing edge. The 11 nose ribs and nine aft wing ribs are made from hydroformed aluminum. The ailerons were adapted from the Murphy Rebel design and are 690NaN0 long with a 150NaN0 chord. The ultralight version has a 40NaN0 greater wingspan to lower its stall speed to below the US ultralight category limit of 280NaN0. With the wings folded the homebuilt version is 8.750NaN0 high and the ultralight version with its longer wings is 10.90NaN0 high.

The horizontal tailplane is 950NaN0 in span to allow legal road transportation on a trailer as most jurisdictions limit trailers to 960NaN0. The ultralight version has an ultimate load limit of +5/-2.7 g and an operational limit of +3.8/-1.8g, while the homebuilt version has an ultimate limit of +5.7/-5.7g and an operational limit of +3.8/-3.8 g.

The kit supplied for the JDM-8 was intended to include the parts to make both versions and the manufacturer claimed a construction time from the kit of 800 hours.[2]

The completed prototype JDM-8 was displayed at Sun 'n Fun in April 2004, but due to the introduction in the US of the light-sport aircraft category at the same time, no orders were forthcoming and by 2008 the aircraft was no longer listed as being available by Patterson AeroSales, the manufacturer's sole sales agent.[3]

Operational history

In January 2011 there were two JDM-8s registered in Canada, one a basic ultralight and the other an advanced ultralight, both owned by the manufacturer.[4]

Variants

US ultralight version
  • Single seat, low-wing monoplane with 241NaN1 wingspan, powered by a 280NaN0 Rotax 277 or other engine of 25to for the US ultralight category
    Homebuilt version
  • Single seat, low-wing monoplane with 201NaN1 wingspan, powered by engines up to 800NaN0, including the powered by a 600NaN0 HKS 700E for the Canadian basic ultralight, advanced ultralight or amateur-built categories[5]

    References

    Notes

    Notes and References

    1. Levy, Howard: Daryl Murphy's Latest, Kitplanes, Volume 20, Number 1, January 2003, pages 10-12. Primedia Publications. ISSN 0891-1851
    2. Downey, Julia: 2002 Kit Aircraft Directory, Kitplanes, Volume 18, Number 12, December 2001, page 55. Kitplanes Acquisition Company. ISSN 0891-1851
    3. Web site: Patterson Aerosales. 5 January 2011. Patterson Aerosales. January 2011.
    4. Web site: Canadian Civil Aircraft Register. 6 January 2011. Transport Canada. January 2011. dead. https://web.archive.org/web/20110718042755/http://wwwapps2.tc.gc.ca/Saf-Sec-Sur/2/ccarcs/aspscripts/en/quicksearch.asp. 18 July 2011.
    5. Web site: Listing of Models Eligible to be Registered as Advanced Ultra-Light Aeroplanes (AULA). 5 January 2011. Transport Canada. September 2010.