flyingfool wrote:
I know there is a roll bar so I'm not too worried about being crushed.
The windscreen roll bar is not foolproof. As I read (no pictures) the NTSB report, poor Ken Brock found that out the hard way.
As "Cubes" has pointed out, the T-18 appears to have good crashworthiness. One worry with similar designs is the fuselage tank, which if it ruptures can lead to a nasty fire. In surveying the fatal T-18 crash reports at NTSB, it's remarkable how few involve fire; most severe (that is, fatal) crashes don't lead to a fire. I suspect it's a byproduct of the A frame which ties the engine mount, mains, and fuselage together; this necessitated a strong cowl ahead of the windscreen to carry loads to the top longerons, and the tank is under that structure. By comparison, the much slower Zenith 601 HD has a large number of fatal fires.
However, the same survey of those NTSB reports has one notable trend: stall/spin. This I imagine is due to the airfoil characteristics. The NACA laminars are not noted for good stalls; their wind tunnel data hints at this. The Sunderland modifications may help here --perhaps those who've flown both will comment. The Riblett laminar airfoils are said (I have seen very few comments) to have softer stalls as well. A stall warning vane or other angle of attack gauge might be a wise addition to a T-18 panel.
Ultimately, as I see it, the T-18's wing loading is what gives it a high stall speed. It probably results from the original T-18 being laid out as a 600 lb machine. It proved strong enough to take far more, and most are so built.
Karl