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Micro AeroDynamics celebrates 25 years, 19,000 VG kits

By General Aviation News Staff · December 4, 2014 ·

ANACORTES, Wash. – Micro AeroDynamics reached a couple of milestones this fall, completing 25 years in the business and shipping its 19,000th STC approved Micro VG kit. Flight testing at the company’s headquarters in Anacortes has produced 75 STCs allowing Micro VG retrofits on a total of 750 aircraft models. They are in use all over the world.

“We’ll be adding to the list of STCs in the future, as conditions warrant,” said Anni Brogan, president. “Meanwhile, we’ll continue to enhance the safety margins of the fleet one aircraft at a time.”

The Beech Baron was one of the earliest aircraft to be flight tested for vortex generators by Micro Aerodynamics.
The Beech Baron was one of the earliest aircraft to be flight tested for vortex generators by Micro Aerodynamics.

Over the years Micro AeroDynamics has received a total of 92 letters and phone calls from people who firmly believe that they would have crashed without the flight enhancing benefits of vortex generators, according to company officials.

Vortex generators have been used on jet aircraft for decades and the technology later adapted to general aviation aircraft by Charles White.

Tiny aluminum pieces with a vertical fin about a quarter inch high are arrayed across the upper leading edge of the wing and sometimes along both sides of the vertical tail and beneath the trailing edge of the horizontal stabilizer. In flight, the generators cause the airflow to develop tiny tornados that keep the boundary layer attached to the wing, rudder or elevator at higher angles of attack, reducing stall speed in the process. This allows aileron control even when the wing is stalled, company officials explained.

The effect of vortex generators on cruise speed is negligible. They enhance controllability at slow speeds, lower Vmc on twin engine aircraft and do not affect certification for flight into known icing.

Related Article – Vortex Generators: Preventing Stalls at High and Low Speeds via BoldMethod.

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Comments

  1. Sirous says

    November 22, 2015 at 8:20 pm

    Hi
    I’m in Melbourne, Australia and looking for VG kit for my 1980 Beechcraft Duchess.
    Wonderful if you could help me with that.
    Regards
    Sirous

  2. Edward Dolejsi says

    December 5, 2014 at 8:37 am

    I installed one of your kits on my Colt about three years ago. I believe it was a true transformation. I could fly it at 45 knots all day, fuel permitting, and if I install a men’s room. It stalls at 40 knots, well, it just mushes down at around 600 fpm and 30 knots forward speed. That’
    s better than a skydiver.
    Congrats on you big 25! Hope yor success continues for you for many more years to come.
    Sincerely,
    Ed

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