Amazingly enough, here in 2020, we have noticeably returned to our roots in very light aircraft. Almost 40 years after Mike Sacrey and his team at FAA created the still-incredible Part 103, one leading brand from those days is not only still in business and thriving, but they are largely building similar aircraft to four decades back. The man you saw on the lead photo is the famed Dick Rahill, a one-man flying machine flying his machine at Sun ‘n Fun more capably than any robot. Over and over, Dick would blast off in the bright yellow Firestar that seemed attached to him. He’d make one quick pattern from the turf runway in Paradise City at Sun ‘n Fun only to land, jump right back in the takeoff line, and repeat. Launch, circle, land, repeat… over and over. It seemed like every other airplane taking off was Dick and his FireStar.
Ultralight April 2020 — Fifth in the Vintage Series: Kolb Firestar
Kolb FireStar
Rahill's Firestar with its twin cylinder Rotax left the ground in 100 feet and landed in less. Some of that performance is a credit to Dick being so utterly at one with his machine. Some of it is simply that Homer Kolb's designs wanted to fly.Your author forms up close for the camera of Ultralight Flying editor, Scott Wilcox.
Current Kolb Aircraft owner, Brian Melborne flies the side-by-side Firestar II. The company offers many varieties of their designs.
Dennis Souder flies the then-new Firefly from Kolb. It can easily meet Part 103 parameters.
https://youtu.be/xRfMcp8VYx8