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#1
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![]() "Reggie" wrote in message ... Does anyone recall ANY experimental aeroplane built by the current leader of the Experimental Aircraft Association???? The organization's name is Experimental Aircraft Association (EAA), not Homebuilt Aviation Association (HAA). Your point in regards to our second-generation President may be well taken, I don't recall him having the aviation background to match his father's; but there is more to experimental aviation than homebuilding. Classics, warbirds & Light Sport should come quickly to mind, but did you know that many gliders are registered Experimental even though they may be factory made? Perhaps that is why many of the glider pilots I have met over the years are members of the EAA, even though they get precious little coverage in the EAA magizine. To me, the EAA has always represented the "little guy" in aviation better and more directly than any other organization. Vaughn |
#2
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![]() "Vaughn Simon" wrote in message ... "Reggie" wrote in message ... Does anyone recall ANY experimental aeroplane built by the current leader of the Experimental Aircraft Association???? The organization's name is Experimental Aircraft Association (EAA), not Homebuilt Aviation Association (HAA). Your point in regards to our second-generation President may be well taken, I don't recall him having the aviation background to match his father's; but there is more to experimental aviation than homebuilding. Classics, warbirds & Light Sport should come quickly to mind, but did you know that many gliders are registered Experimental even though they may be factory made? Perhaps that is why many of the glider pilots I have met over the years are members of the EAA, even though they get precious little coverage in the EAA magizine. To me, the EAA has always represented the "little guy" in aviation better and more directly than any other organization. Vaughn Vaughn: I'm missing something. How does the word Experimental tie into Warbirds, Classics, and Light Sport? What category do the factory built "Experimental" gliders fall under? Exhibition? It seems to me that EAA is really flying under false colors. A more representative name eludes me but it sure wouldn't be Experimental based on what I see in the magazine and the EAA video from Oshkosh as well as the focus every year at show center. Indeed one year the EAA video did not even mention the award winners, but did have Mooneys and Beechcraft aircraft shown. I do agree that EAA does the best job in defending us from our "Elected" Representatives and because of that reason alone I maintain my membership. Stu |
#3
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![]() "Stuart & Kathryn Fields" wrote in message .. . "Vaughn Simon" wrote in message ... "Reggie" wrote in message ... Does anyone recall ANY experimental aeroplane built by the current leader of the Experimental Aircraft Association???? The organization's name is Experimental Aircraft Association (EAA), not Homebuilt Aviation Association (HAA). Your point in regards to our second-generation President may be well taken, I don't recall him having the aviation background to match his father's; but there is more to experimental aviation than homebuilding. Classics, warbirds & Light Sport should come quickly to mind, but did you know that many gliders are registered Experimental even though they may be factory made? Perhaps that is why many of the glider pilots I have met over the years are members of the EAA, even though they get precious little coverage in the EAA magizine. To me, the EAA has always represented the "little guy" in aviation better and more directly than any other organization. Vaughn Vaughn: I'm missing something. How does the word Experimental tie into Warbirds, Classics, and Light Sport? What category do the factory built "Experimental" gliders fall under? Exhibition? It seems to me that EAA is really flying under false colors. A more representative name eludes me but it sure wouldn't be Experimental based on what I see in the magazine and the EAA video from Oshkosh as well as the focus every year at show center. Indeed one year the EAA video did not even mention the award winners, but did have Mooneys and Beechcraft aircraft shown. I do agree that EAA does the best job in defending us from our "Elected" Representatives and because of that reason alone I maintain my membership. Stu I believe that you are missing two things: 1) Amateur Built is only the largest, and possibly the best known, sub category of Experimental. IIRC, most of the the warbirds fall into Exhibition. But, AFAIK, just about anything that is permitted to fly, and does not quite fit any other category, is likely to be Experimental. 2) The chapters are a very big part of the EAA, and are home to a lot of assistance and expertise--in addition to plain old encouragement and comaraderie. They can also provide linkage to a lot of "home office" expertise--and many maintain libraries of back issues and caches of tools, clecos, etc. BTW, there are also chapters of the IAC (International Aerobatic Club) and also Warbird chapters which are also part of EAA, but not part of the basic EAA chapter list. So the "broader audience" part is far from being the whole story! Peter |
#4
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![]() To me, the EAA has always represented the "little guy" in aviation better and more directly than any other organization. Vaughn Very true, and they still do a decent job of it. In addition, the chapters continue to accomplish a lot of the tasks that fell to the magazines before there were so many chapters. Peter |
#5
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![]() "Vaughn Simon" wrote in message ... "Reggie" wrote in message ... Does anyone recall ANY experimental aeroplane built by the current leader of the Experimental Aircraft Association???? The organization's name is Experimental Aircraft Association (EAA), not Homebuilt Aviation Association (HAA). Your point in regards to our second-generation President may be well taken, I don't recall him having the aviation background to match his father's; but there is more to experimental aviation than homebuilding. Classics, warbirds & Light Sport should come quickly to mind, but did you know that many gliders are registered Experimental even though they may be factory made? Perhaps that is why many of the glider pilots I have met over the years are members of the EAA, even though they get precious little coverage in the EAA magizine. To me, the EAA has always represented the "little guy" in aviation better and more directly than any other organization. I believe that the main categories of "Experimental" airworthiness certificates are Exhibition, Air Racing, Amateur built, Market Survey - sales demonstration, research and development. I don't believe that Light Sport is part of this system. "War Birds" fall in Exhibition and/or Air Racing as do many competition sailplanes. R&D/Market Survey are normally pre-production version of aircraft intended for standard airworthiness certificates. Of course classic/antique aircraft must be maintained in accordance with their standard airworthiness certificate. Even though the EAA was instrumental as a lobbying agency for the Light Sports Aircraft and the transition of ultra-light aircraft to the light sport category; light sports aviation's birth has been completed and is live, well and growingl. The successful growth of LSA is no longer dependant on the EAA. It would appear to me that the EAA should return to a balance between Exhibition, Air Racing, Amateur Built, and classic/antique. Isn't this the organizations legacy? I also believe it is the organizations future. Wayne HP-14 N990 http://www.soaridaho.com/Schreder |
#6
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I missed something (probably obvious), but what do Classics, warbirds
and (some LSA) have to do with "experimental" per se? My take is that an experimental (amateur built) plane is defined as one BUILT by the owner for educational purposes. It would be nice to have an organizational leader who has built an experimental amateur built airplane, but it isn't absolutely necessary for leading an organization of experimental amateur builders... Scott Vaughn Simon wrote: "Reggie" wrote in message ... Does anyone recall ANY experimental aeroplane built by the current leader of the Experimental Aircraft Association???? The organization's name is Experimental Aircraft Association (EAA), not Homebuilt Aviation Association (HAA). Your point in regards to our second-generation President may be well taken, I don't recall him having the aviation background to match his father's; but there is more to experimental aviation than homebuilding. Classics, warbirds & Light Sport should come quickly to mind, but did you know that many gliders are registered Experimental even though they may be factory made? Perhaps that is why many of the glider pilots I have met over the years are members of the EAA, even though they get precious little coverage in the EAA magizine. To me, the EAA has always represented the "little guy" in aviation better and more directly than any other organization. Vaughn -- Scott http://corbenflyer.tripod.com/ Gotta Fly or Gonna Die Building RV-4 (Super Slow Build Version) |
#7
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![]() "Vaughn Simon" wrote in message ... "Reggie" wrote in message ... Does anyone recall ANY experimental aeroplane built by the current leader of the Experimental Aircraft Association???? The organization's name is Experimental Aircraft Association (EAA), not Homebuilt Aviation Association (HAA). snip Homebuilt Aviation Association was considered back in 1953 when the name was adopted. The "nameing" committee settled upon the "Experimental" Aviation Association, since all homebuilt aircraft were licensed in a category of the experimental classification that was created by the FAA especially for us. That category is "Experimental - Amateur Built" and is what made the EAA possible. Only "homebuilt" aircraft are eligible for certification in t his special category. Warbirds and Classics are not. Highflyer, EAA#9135 |
#8
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![]() Does anyone recall ANY experimental aeroplane built by the current leader of the Experimental Aircraft Association???? The organization's name is Experimental Aircraft Association (EAA), not Homebuilt Aviation Association (HAA). Your point in regards to our second-generation President may be well taken, I don't recall him having the aviation background to match his father's; but there is more to experimental aviation than homebuilding. Classics, warbirds & Light Sport should come quickly to mind, but did you know that many gliders are registered Experimental even though they may be factory made? Perhaps that is why many of the glider pilots I have met over the years are members of the EAA, even though they get precious little coverage in the EAA magizine. The gliders are registered Experimental as a dodge against filing the paperwork by their rich spoiled European manufacturers. Either type certification IS good or it IS NOT good. If it IS good we should demand adherence and make Experimental non-Amateur-Built operations really limited to their actual stated purpose. If it IS NOT good we should get rid of it. If it is good for air carrier and business aircraft and not good for personally owned non commercial aircraft, which is what I believe, that's what should be stated and campaigned for. Not dodged. |
#9
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![]() "Bret Ludwig" wrote in message ... Does anyone recall ANY experimental aeroplane built by the current leader of the Experimental Aircraft Association???? The organization's name is Experimental Aircraft Association (EAA), not Homebuilt Aviation Association (HAA). Your point in regards to our second-generation President may be well taken, I don't recall him having the aviation background to match his father's; but there is more to experimental aviation than homebuilding. Classics, warbirds & Light Sport should come quickly to mind, but did you know that many gliders are registered Experimental even though they may be factory made? Perhaps that is why many of the glider pilots I have met over the years are members of the EAA, even though they get precious little coverage in the EAA magizine. The gliders are registered Experimental as a dodge against filing the paperwork by their rich spoiled European manufacturers. I believe all current production European manufactured gliders receive a Standard airworthiness certificate when imported to the US. It has been that way for several years. Previously these high performance competition sailplanes were imported with an Experimental - Air Racing air worthieness certificate. As for me, I fly an Experimental (Amateur-Built) sailplane. (http://www.soaridaho.com/Schreder/HP-14/N990/N990.html) It was designed by Richard Schreder EAA member #504. (http://www.soaridaho.com/Schreder/Sc...Biography.html) Wayne HP-14 "6F" http://www.soaridaho.com/Schreder |
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