Ed Fisher, an avid compiler of Mong Sport history, in 1981 met with designer Ralph Mong. After the completion of the Fisher Skylite, Fisher suggested building an ultralight version of the Mong Sport. A custom built ultralight prototype was built for Fisher, called the Travelight. A second model was constructed, built for pilots up to 6' 2" (188cm), which became known as the Micro Mong.[2]
Design
The fuselage is welded 4130 steel tubing. The front wing spars are 2.5in (6.4cm) aluminum tubing, with aluminum ribs and aircraft fabric covering. If equipped with a Rotax 277 engine, the aircraft meets American FAR 103 Ultralight Vehicle standards, by weighing less than 254lb (115kg). The wing area of the ultralight version is larger than the heavier Mong Sport it replicates, in order to keep the stall speed low.[2][3][4]
Operational history
Micro Mong on floats
A Micro Mong floatplane recorded the fastest seaplane takeoff of 2.5 seconds at the Experimental Aircraft Association airshow in 2008.[5]
Variants
Micro Mong 2XF
Powered by a HKS 700E 2 cylinder 4-stroke air-cooled engine.
Raceair Lil Bitts
Developed at the same time by Fisher using a deeper Micro Mong fuselage to resemble a Pitts Special.[6]
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