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#11
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Larry Dighera wrote:
All should be aware, that EAA members do not typify airmen in general. They are a 'special' group of airmen, many of whom do a lot more building than flying throughout the year, which may account for the issue Mr. Durden's article addresses. Doubtful. An analysis of homebuilt accidents in Kitplanes magazine a couple of year ago (October 2004) shows that homebuilders are higher time pilots than the average GA pilot and have fewer accidents, hour for hour, that involve pilot error. Homebuilt aircraft admittedly have more accidents overall due to mechanical failures, but that has nothing to do with what was going on at Oshkosh. In my opinion, Mr. Durden's article was about too many pilots with too little concern for safety trying to be in the same place at the same time. Tom Young (building the world's safest RV-4) |
#12
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VFR is OK, but if you are needing to travel on a schedule,
IFR is essential anytime the weather is MVFR and you can't see the ridges or the towers. Very true. And even IFR there are days you're not going to be flying anywhere in a Spam can. Luckily, the schedules I fly on are usually quite "soft" and allow for a fair degree of flexibility. -- Jay Honeck Iowa City, IA Pathfinder N56993 www.AlexisParkInn.com "Your Aviation Destination" |
#13
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![]() Jim Macklin wrote: If you fly at 180 mph (Bonanza class) If I'm throttled back. |
#14
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"Jay Honeck" wrote:
The author, Rick Durden, is a regular here, and a straight shooter. What he says in that article is 100% on the money. I agree completely. I was there too, and although I haven't been there as many times as Jay has, it was chaotic enough to really think about the risks involved. We were following two RV's who had no concept of the traffic pattern, how to hold altitude and speed at the same time, how to follow instructions, how to wait their turn, etc. I have no idea if they had the Notam, but in short, it was just a mess. That said, the FAA itself was largely to blame for much of the confusion over Rush and Green Lakes this year. (I know -- I was there.) If the controllers had only said "Guys, there's been an accident on the field, and we don't know how long the hold is going to be." -- half the planes holding would have diverted to other airports to wait it out. Yes, a little information would have gone a long way. I was about "that close" to bailing out of the holding pattern and going to land somewhere until the rush (no pun) died down. An estimate of the closure time would have been very helpful, and maybe a calming influence on the rabble. Mike |
#15
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![]() Tom Young wrote: Doubtful. An analysis of homebuilt accidents in Kitplanes magazine a couple of year ago (October 2004) shows that homebuilders are higher time pilots than the average GA pilot and have fewer accidents, hour for hour, that involve pilot error. I can vouch for that. There's a guy just down the hangar row from me. Big EAA guy. Thousands of hours as a Navy pilot. He went on to be a test pilot. He was one of the test pilots for the F14, F18 and F111. He should know more than mopst of us put together. Now fast forwad 25 years after his militray career is over. Quite possibly the dumbest guy you've ever met. He built a Kitfox, which is dumb enough, but loaded it up with so much crap that with a full tank and him on board he was 50 pounds over gross. He installed an air horn, yes, an air horn. Just like on the General Lee. Took off on his first flight, no tailwheel time by the way. Storms approaching, wind blowing 15 kts at takeoff. Flies 20 miles away and engine pukes because he screwed up the fuel system. Then he proceeds to deadstick, with a 30 kt tailwind and busts the plane in half. Breaks his back and has to walk out to a road to be found. Scratch one ****box Kitfox. Now he's rebuilding an Aeronca Chief. This is ****box number two. Yoke won't smoothly go in and out because he has stuff behind the panel interfering with its travel. Takes it out for taxi practice on another day with a storm approaching, ground loops it and breaks the spar a couple feet in from the end. Opens up the wing and screws a metal patch on either side of busted spar and covers it all back up. Not even remotely airworthy. Most EAA guys I've seen aren't this bad but they are the absolute bottom of the barrel pilot skill wise. |
#16
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![]() Newps wrote: Tom Young wrote: Doubtful. An analysis of homebuilt accidents in Kitplanes magazine a couple of year ago (October 2004) shows that homebuilders are higher time pilots than the average GA pilot and have fewer accidents, hour for hour, that involve pilot error. I can vouch for that. There's a guy just down the hangar row from me. Big EAA guy. Thousands of hours as a Navy pilot. He went on to be a test pilot. He was one of the test pilots for the F14, F18 and F111. He should know more than mopst of us put together. Now fast forwad 25 years after his militray career is over. Quite possibly the dumbest guy you've ever met. He built a Kitfox, which is dumb enough, but loaded it up with so much crap that with a full tank and him on board he was 50 pounds over gross. He installed an air horn, yes, an air horn. Just like on the General Lee. Took off on his first flight, no tailwheel time by the way. Storms approaching, wind blowing 15 kts at takeoff. Flies 20 miles away and engine pukes because he screwed up the fuel system. Then he proceeds to deadstick, with a 30 kt tailwind and busts the plane in half. Breaks his back and has to walk out to a road to be found. Scratch one ****box Kitfox. Now he's rebuilding an Aeronca Chief. This is ****box number two. Yoke won't smoothly go in and out because he has stuff behind the panel interfering with its travel. Takes it out for taxi practice on another day with a storm approaching, ground loops it and breaks the spar a couple feet in from the end. Opens up the wing and screws a metal patch on either side of busted spar and covers it all back up. Not even remotely airworthy. Most EAA guys I've seen aren't this bad but they are the absolute bottom of the barrel pilot skill wise. And this is all perfectly legal under the FARs. |
#17
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Newps wrote:
I can vouch for that. There's a guy just down the hangar row from me. Big EAA guy. Thousands of hours as a Navy pilot. He went on to be a test pilot. He was one of the test pilots for the F14, F18 and F111. He should know more than mopst of us put together. Now fast forwad 25 years after his militray career is over. Quite possibly the dumbest guy you've ever met. He built a Kitfox, which is dumb enough, but loaded it up with so much crap that with a full tank and him on board he was 50 pounds over gross. He installed an air horn, yes, an air horn. Just like on the General Lee. Took off on his first flight, no tailwheel time by the way. Storms approaching, wind blowing 15 kts at takeoff. Flies 20 miles away and engine pukes because he screwed up the fuel system. Then he proceeds to deadstick, with a 30 kt tailwind and busts the plane in half. Breaks his back and has to walk out to a road to be found. Scratch one ****box Kitfox. Good story, but it sounds like the decision of a macho doofus who overestimated his skills and underestimated the demands of his aircraft, not your average experimental builder. Most of us -- the ones with brains, anyway -- work with EAA tech counselors to get building advice and inspections during the building process, and we work with flight advisors for checking out the aircraft THOROUGHLY before the first flight and during the testing phase. Many builders wouldn't even consider being the first to test fly their airplane, because, yeah, that makes them a test pilot and they know they don't have the skills. Now he's rebuilding an Aeronca Chief. This is ****box number two. Yoke won't smoothly go in and out because he has stuff behind the panel interfering with its travel. Takes it out for taxi practice on another day with a storm approaching, ground loops it and breaks the spar a couple feet in from the end. Opens up the wing and screws a metal patch on either side of busted spar and covers it all back up. Not even remotely airworthy. ****box number two is not an experimental aircraft, so this accident goes into the non-experimental category. From where I'm standing it looks like a wash: one accident for an experimental aircraft, one for a normal aircraft. Tom Young |
#18
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I'm rearranging this just a bit for clarity. Responses below.
Skylune wrote: And this is all perfectly legal under the FARs. Assuming this ex-test pilot was in the US, no, all of this is definitely not legal. Here are some illegal things this guy did, per Newps' description: Newps wrote: loaded it up with so much crap that with a full tank and him on board he was 50 pounds over gross. He flew the airplane outside of its operating limitations. Took off on his first flight, no tailwheel time by the way. He flew a conventional gear aircraft without having a tailwheel endorsement. Now he's rebuilding an Aeronca Chief. He can only make major repairs or alterations if he's certificated to do so. I guess he could be, but it sure doesn't sound like it. Yoke won't smoothly go in and out because he has stuff behind the panel interfering with its travel. The aircraft was not in airworthy condition. Opens up the wing and screws a metal patch on either side of busted spar and covers it all back up. Not even remotely airworthy. Enough said. Bottom line is, the necessary regulations are already in place to make experimental aviation a safe activity, but there are plenty of rules in the FARs that builders and pilots can ignore if they choose. Personal responsibility is crucial. Tom Young |
#19
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Tom Young wrote
Newps wrote: loaded it up with so much crap that with a full tank and him on board he was 50 pounds over gross. He flew the airplane outside of its operating limitations. AS builder of the aircraft, he gets to set the GTOW to any number that he desires. Took off on his first flight, no tailwheel time by the way. He flew a conventional gear aircraft without having a tailwheel endorsement. (2) The rating limitations of this section do not apply to— (iii) The holder of a pilot certificate when operating an aircraft under the authority of— (B) An experimental certificate, unless the operation involves carrying a passenger Now he's rebuilding an Aeronca Chief. He can only make major repairs or alterations if he's certificated to do so. I guess he could be, but it sure doesn't sound like it. His airplane, he can do anything he wants to provided an airman certificated to determine the airworthiness of aircraft makes a determination that it is in fact airworthy and so states in the aircraft log book. Bob Moore Builder and Test Pilot....MiniMax |
#20
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Bob Moore wrote:
Tom Young wrote Newps wrote: loaded it up with so much crap that with a full tank and him on board he was 50 pounds over gross. He flew the airplane outside of its operating limitations. AS builder of the aircraft, he gets to set the GTOW to any number that he desires. Yes, but just on the fly like that? I assumed that the builder sets it when he originally certifies the airplane and has to recertify if he wants to change it later. Am I wrong about that? Took off on his first flight, no tailwheel time by the way. He flew a conventional gear aircraft without having a tailwheel endorsement. (2) The rating limitations of this section do not apply to- (iii) The holder of a pilot certificate when operating an aircraft under the authority of- (B) An experimental certificate, unless the operation involves carrying a passenger Ack. I didn't see paragraph (k). My mistake. Now he's rebuilding an Aeronca Chief. He can only make major repairs or alterations if he's certificated to do so. I guess he could be, but it sure doesn't sound like it. His airplane, he can do anything he wants to provided an airman certificated to determine the airworthiness of aircraft makes a determination that it is in fact airworthy and so states in the aircraft log book. That much I knew, actually. I took the statement that the repair wasn't airworthy at face value, but only to make the point that the FARs do include provisions about shoddy mechanical work. Anyway, thanks for the correx. Tom (still learning the rules) Young |
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