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#1
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I am researching an article about builders whose kit supplier has
closed or gone bankrupt. If you have found yourself in this predicament, I would like to talk with you about how you dealt with it during the building process. You may contact me directly at Thanks. Mary Bernard |
#2
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It just seems prudent to me to not build a homebuilt that can't be
built from plans. |
#4
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On 22 May 2005 15:00:15 -0700, "abripl" wrote:
wrote: It just seems prudent to me to not build a homebuilt that can't be built from plans. You can also buy the whole kit right away and then you have all the parts to finish even if they dissapear. Wellll...that depends on whether the company is DELIVERING kits and kit components quickly. Most companies seem to have a bit of delay between receiving the order and shipping the kit (an argument for picking it up yourself, true). Tottering companies sometimes delay shipments of expensive goodies, like engines, etc. I know a guy who waited eight months for the off-the-shelf Maule tailwheel assembly that was supposed to come with his kit. Ron Wanttaja |
#5
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an argument for picking it up yourself, true....
Yes thats what I did. I phoned them ahead and asked if they have the pieces ready and then went there and picked it up and paid them on the spot. Actually they still did not have 100% everything but it all trickled in within a few months. I did hear of some other scarry stories - like where a retract gear was paid for in advance and did not get delivered for five years. Fortunately the builder still did not get to that stage anyway. |
#6
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![]() A simple plans built airplane can be built in 2000 hours,assuming you work halfway efficiently. The problem is many builders have no skills and also no great amount of time to devote to the project because they are working a lot of hours. (You'd think they would be therefore affluent enough to buy an airplane....) The sad part is kits wind up taking these people almost as much time as a scratchbuilt airplane would. The bottom line is you need to become a skilled aircraft mechanic to build an airplane...is it a skill set you value enough to learn at this price? (Don't mistake "skilled" for "licensed". They have absolutely no relation whatsoever to each other.) Experimental Amateur Built has, to an extent, become a simple and baldfaced dodge around type certification. When 90% of builders are building a few types of 49% done kits on a cookie cutter basis, it's time to re-evaluate "the system". Experimental should be for experimenters: people like Van Grunsven should be told to get a type certificate, tool up, and build a finished airplane. |
#7
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...Experimental should be for experimenters...
Thats somewhat of a misnomer. We often use the term "homebuilt" or "amateur built" for an aircraft that is essentially cheaper for the performance and not necessarily building it as an experiment or pioneering in the field. I built a homebuilt in order to have an IFR aircraft that cruises about 200mph and seats 4 (and incidentally uses about 5gal/hr at 120knots) for a fraction of the price of a certified. Yes. I had fun... but now I enjoy more flying it rather than "experimenting" with it. The biggest advantage of plans built is cost. Although too much "experimenting" even with a plans built can erase that advantage. The biggest disadvantage is time and the chance that the original builder will abandon the project - about 90% of the time. .....A simple plans built airplane can be built in 2000 hours.... Yeah ... too simple.... A comparative plans built aircraft would take me twice as long as my kit unit did. Most similar plans built units I have noted, took 10-15 years. There isn't a great chance I could finish one to enjoy flying one at my age. -------------------------------------------------------------- SQ2000 canard: http://www.abri.com/sq2000 |
#8
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#9
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#10
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people like Van Grunsven should be told to get a type
certificate, tool up, and build a finished airplane. What is your beef? Sounds like you have an agenda or some type of beef with people that build aircraft for "educational and recreational" purposes. Experimental is not what the homebuilt aircraft is about although that is certainly a part of it. Jerry |
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