Same problem with the Navion. I'm wondering if it's a matter of designing the servo brackets and control linkages and the idea of stocking those parts for 600-ish different types that slows Dynon down. Certainly the autopilots that Dynon currently produce fly in a wide variety of experimental aircraft and they only have bracket and linkage kits for a very few of them. Dynon has certified their servos and that is the hard to do side of the project.
I haven't spoken to Dynon about this problem. But, if brackets and linkage is the issue, the type clubs could certainly help out. It's quite common for some relatively low volume STCs to call out parts to be made rather than supplying a part with the STC. Frequently these parts are made by owners or under the owner produced parts rules by a mechanic but still under the control of the STC holder. If the type clubs or a group of owners collaborate to design the prototypes and work with the FAA ACOs to approve the data used to fabricate the parts, that could be licensed, at no cost, to Dynon to include in their STC.
If we have to wait until the limited engineering resources Dynon gets to develop 600 installation kits and stock them, it could be a while. Granted, Type B's are much further up the list than type N's the concept is the same. personally, I'd rather have the Dynon engineers working on upgrades and features than designing brackets. It's a resource vs. return for them. It's a functionality issue for us, no matter how low the volume of sales we might represent.
- Bill