Back in the Saddle in a Flightstar Ultralight

Gemini Sparkle

Key Takeaways:

  • The author returned to flight in an ultralight after a five-month hiatus, enjoying a scenic flight over northeast Connecticut with a friend.
  • Flying the Flightstar IISC ultralight, the author noted its remarkable lightness and pleasant, low-gee maneuvers, distinguishing it from heavier Light-Sport Aircraft (LSA).
  • The article highlights the Flightstar IISC ultralight's affordability at $25,000, contrasting it with $100,000 LSAs and suggesting why pilots might prefer ultralights over Cessnas.
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Who wouldn’t smile at the prospect of a smooth afternoon flight on a beautiful fall day via ultralight? Photo by Jeff Burnett

On a glorious fall day over the undulating hills of northeast Connecticut, I returned to flight after a five-month hiatus. Encouraged and accompanied by my old friend Tom Peghiny we enjoyed an hour sightseeing flight over the verdant countryside surrounding Tom’s Flightstar Sportplanes enterprise at the Woodstock airport. Gosh, it felt great to get back in the air! *** With the first revolution of the wheels I noticed how light the Flightstar seemed. I’ve done most of my flying in Light-Sport Aircraft lately and I guess I’d forgotten just how light ultralights can feel. We left the ground in a couple hundred feet lifted by a HKS 700E four stroke distributed by HPower. In an age of $100,000 LSA, this $25,000 Flightstar IISC certainly seems affordable to plenty of Americans. At 400 pounds less than LSA at gross, turns were pleasant low-gee maneuvers. No wonder pilots sell Cessnas to fly ultralights.

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