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Larry Dighera wrote in
: On Fri, 7 Mar 2008 03:48:36 -0800 (PST), stol wrote in : On Mar 6, 11:03*pm, cavelamb himself wrote: Jim Logajan wrote: Jim Logajan wrote: The FAA is about to make it a whole hell of a lot harder for people to build safe amateur built aircraft. Richard VanGrunsven, founder of one of the most successful kit aircraft companies, has written up a warning and a call to arms about the issue. You can read it beginning on page 3 of this document: http://doc.vansaircraft.com/RVator/2...008-RVator.pdf Also consider using this site (to save Vans Aircraft some bandwidth load): http://www.vansairforce.net/rvator/1-2008-RVator.pdf Sounds more like they want to make it harder to_have_one_built_for_you. * These articles explain the FAA's concerns over excessive commercial abuses of the Experimental Amateur Built (E-AB) licensing category. The ARC committee was created as an FAA/EAA/ Industry process to address the FAA concerns and to recommend corrective actions. I agree with the , " harder to have one built for you" concept.. I have been to several airshows-fly-ins etc, and chat with experimental owners who sit under the wings of their bought homebuilts and bask in the glow of,, See what I built crap. Later in the conversation they usually say " Yeah, Ol Clem up in Montana, Texas, Florida", pick a state, " did a great job of building my wizbang 200 mph toy. In my mind they are lying sacks of **** and with this action are poking their finger in the eyes of the FAA. The intent of experimental / homebuilts rule was for the " educational and recreational aspect of the builder, not to see who has the most money.. IMHO. Ben Personally, I see no reason for our government to intrude on our freedom to commission the construction of an aircraft. If the FAA is going to permit the sale and operation by non-builders of aircraft licensed as experimental, the ban on having one built for you seems at least inconsistent. And the implication that having personally constructed the aircraft somehow enhances its performance or suitability for operation in the NAS is ludicrous, IMO. To me, the 51% policy smacks of protectionism for normal/utility aircraft manufacturers. I realize this is probably an unpopular opinion among the majority of armature aircraft builders, but emotional jealousy of those able to afford commissioning the construction of an aircraft, I fail to find an _objective_ reason for homebuilders' objections. What am I missing? Pretty much everythign , as usual, Larry. You don't build so **** off and mind your own business. Bertie |
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On Mar 7, 9:11*am, Larry Dighera wrote:
Personally, I see no reason for our government to intrude on our freedom to commission the construction of an aircraft. *If the FAA is going to permit the sale and operation by non-builders of aircraft licensed as experimental, the ban on having one built for you seems at least inconsistent. *And the implication that having personally constructed the aircraft somehow enhances its performance or suitability for operation in the NAS is ludicrous, IMO. *To me, the 51% policy smacks of protectionism for normal/utility aircraft manufacturers. * I realize this is probably an unpopular opinion among the majority of armature aircraft builders, but emotional jealousy of those able to afford commissioning the construction of an aircraft, I fail to find an _objective_ reason for homebuilders' objections. *What am I missing? I do agree that it is not in our interests as homebuilders or citizens to permit the government to intrude any further on our freedoms. I also agree that the 51% policy seems to contain at least an element of protectionism for manufacturers. All that said, the most common argument (not necessarily one with which I'm in agreement) in favor of professional builds of experimental aircraft is that the pro shops turn out a better quality product which is less likely to injure or kill the proverbial innocent bystander. Even if we accept that at face value (which I certainly don't), it begs for the creation of a new experimental sub-category, perhaps Experimental Professional Built, with increased oversight akin to that suffered by the standard category manufacturers in pursuing and maintaining their type certificates. I have only two emotional reactions to people who've commissioned their 'amateur built' aircraft. The first is against those who sit by their planes at airshows and pass the work off as their own and happily collect whatever trophies come their way. At the very least, the major shows should institute an additional judging category, such that folks who actually constructed their own airplanes with their own hands for the purpose of their own education and recreation are only in competition against each other and are not up against the check writers. The second is that these people (airplane 'commissioners') are simply in violation of the existing rules. As far as I'm concerned, someone who doesn't like the rules is free to attempt to change them within the system, but is most certainly not free to flout them at will. I have zero sympathy for rule breakers in any context, and certainly not in my proverbial backyard. Ken |
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Larry Dighera wrote:
On Fri, 7 Mar 2008 03:48:36 -0800 (PST), stol wrote in : On Mar 6, 11:03 pm, cavelamb himself wrote: Jim Logajan wrote: Jim Logajan wrote: The FAA is about to make it a whole hell of a lot harder for people to build safe amateur built aircraft. Richard VanGrunsven, founder of one of the most successful kit aircraft companies, has written up a warning and a call to arms about the issue. You can read it beginning on page 3 of this document: http://doc.vansaircraft.com/RVator/2...008-RVator.pdf Also consider using this site (to save Vans Aircraft some bandwidth load): http://www.vansairforce.net/rvator/1-2008-RVator.pdf Sounds more like they want to make it harder to_have_one_built_for_you. These articles explain the FAA's concerns over excessive commercial abuses of the Experimental Amateur Built (E-AB) licensing category. The ARC committee was created as an FAA/EAA/ Industry process to address the FAA concerns and to recommend corrective actions. I agree with the , " harder to have one built for you" concept.. I have been to several airshows-fly-ins etc, and chat with experimental owners who sit under the wings of their bought homebuilts and bask in the glow of,, See what I built crap. Later in the conversation they usually say " Yeah, Ol Clem up in Montana, Texas, Florida", pick a state, " did a great job of building my wizbang 200 mph toy. In my mind they are lying sacks of **** and with this action are poking their finger in the eyes of the FAA. The intent of experimental / homebuilts rule was for the " educational and recreational aspect of the builder, not to see who has the most money.. IMHO. Ben Personally, I see no reason for our government to intrude on our freedom to commission the construction of an aircraft. If the FAA is going to permit the sale and operation by non-builders of aircraft licensed as experimental, the ban on having one built for you seems at least inconsistent. And the implication that having personally constructed the aircraft somehow enhances its performance or suitability for operation in the NAS is ludicrous, IMO. To me, the 51% policy smacks of protectionism for normal/utility aircraft manufacturers. I realize this is probably an unpopular opinion among the majority of armature aircraft builders, but emotional jealousy of those able to afford commissioning the construction of an aircraft, I fail to find an _objective_ reason for homebuilders' objections. What am I missing? Your frontal lobes, from all appearances... |
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Larry Dighera wrote:
snipping here - to set a good example... Personally, I see no reason for our government to intrude on our freedom to commission the construction of an aircraft. If the FAA is going to permit the sale and operation by non-builders of aircraft licensed as experimental, the ban on having one built for you seems at least inconsistent. And the implication that having personally constructed the aircraft somehow enhances its performance or suitability for operation in the NAS is ludicrous, IMO. To me, the 51% policy smacks of protectionism for normal/utility aircraft manufacturers. You never had the freedom to commissioon the construction of an aircraft. |
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On Fri, 07 Mar 2008 14:11:36 GMT, Larry Dighera wrote:
Personally, I see no reason for our government to intrude on our freedom to commission the construction of an aircraft. If the FAA is going to permit the sale and operation by non-builders of aircraft licensed as experimental, the ban on having one built for you seems at least inconsistent. And the implication that having personally constructed the aircraft somehow enhances its performance or suitability for operation in the NAS is ludicrous, IMO. To me, the 51% policy smacks of protectionism for normal/utility aircraft manufacturers. I realize this is probably an unpopular opinion among the majority of armature aircraft builders, but emotional jealousy of those able to afford commissioning the construction of an aircraft, I fail to find an _objective_ reason for homebuilders' objections. What he said. What am I missing? I guess we must be missing something, staying tuned...... -- Remove numbers for gmail and for God's sake it ain't "gee" either! |
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On Fri, 7 Mar 2008 03:48:36 -0800 (PST), stol
wrote: I agree with the , " harder to have one built for you" concept.. I have been to several airshows-fly-ins etc, and chat with experimental owners who sit under the wings of their bought homebuilts and bask in the glow of,, See what I built crap. Later in the conversation they usually say " Yeah, Ol Clem up in Montana, Texas, Florida", pick a state, " did a great job of building my wizbang 200 mph toy. In my mind they are lying sacks of **** and with this action are poking their finger in the eyes of the FAA. The intent of experimental / homebuilts rule was for the " educational and recreational aspect of the builder, not to see who has the most money.. IMHO. Ben I agree, some of the goings on in the homebuilt kit world have been pushing things past the limit, and putting the whole homebuilt rule in jepordy. I have no sympathy for Van and his worries of a few customers that may not buy his kits if they have to do a little more work putting them together. |
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On Mar 7, 6:48*am, stol wrote:
On Mar 6, 11:03*pm, cavelamb himself wrote: Jim Logajan wrote: Jim Logajan wrote: The FAA is about to make it a whole hell of a lot harder for people to build safe amateur built aircraft. Richard VanGrunsven, founder of one of the most successful kit aircraft companies, has written up a warning and a call to arms about the issue. You can read it beginning on page 3 of this document: http://doc.vansaircraft.com/RVator/2...008-RVator.pdf Also consider using this site (to save Vans Aircraft some bandwidth load): http://www.vansairforce.net/rvator/1-2008-RVator.pdf Sounds more like they want to make it harder to_have_one_built_for_you. * These articles explain the FAA's concerns over excessive commercial abuses of the Experimental Amateur Built (E-AB) licensing category. The ARC committee was created as an FAA/EAA/ Industry process to address the FAA concerns and to recommend corrective actions. I agree with the , " harder to have one built for you" concept.. I have been to several airshows-fly-ins etc, and chat with experimental owners who sit under the wings of their *bought homebuilts and bask in the glow of,, See what I built crap. Later in the conversation they usually say " Yeah, Ol Clem up in Montana, Texas, Florida", pick a state, " did a great job of building my wizbang 200 mph toy. In my mind they are lying sacks of **** and with this action are poking their finger in the eyes of the FAA. The intent of experimental / homebuilts rule was for the " educational and recreational aspect of the builder, not to see who has the most money.. IMHO. Ben- Hide quoted text - - Show quoted text - I agree with you to a certain point. I think that there arepeople out there who are better off having 'one made for them' than to have them make it themselves. I know people will say, 'so let them get a certified one!' Well... just well... Wil |
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On Fri, 7 Mar 2008 18:13:41 -0800 (PST), William Hung
I agree with you to a certain point. I think that there arepeople out there who are better off having 'one made for them' than to have them make it themselves. I know people will say, 'so let them get a certified one!' Well... just well... Wil No doubt. I helped a friend about a year ago pick up a Glasair 2S kit that had been partially built by a very untalented builder. What we couldn't see during the inspection was that every single layup the guy did was unsound. The entire project had to be delaminated and then re-laminated. It ended up being more work than if it had been a new kit. If he had finished it, it could have came apart in the air. The previous builder must have done no surface prep at all before any of his laminations. Even though it's called for. Buyer beware as they say. I've also looked at finished projects at Lakeland and OSH that were pro built, and I wasn't impressed with the glasswork. But pro builders can't waste time perfecting things, or they'd take too long to finish it. So the more hurried work shows in areas if you know what to look for. Plus, pro builders make more money charging as they go, rather than if they had to finish it with their own money, then sell it. Most owners I've talked to that have had their planes professionally built end up with more invested than if they had just bought one outright, finished and flying. For a Glasair 3, it's usually over $200K to have one pro built, for a plane that's sold on the market in the $150K range, give or take depending on how nice it is. So for the owner, he'll always end up upside down in his plane if he writes a check to have it built. I guess it's worth it to some to have it done the way they want it, and to remove the mystery of the construction quality. |
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![]() "William Hung" wrote I agree with you to a certain point. I think that there arepeople out there who are better off having 'one made for them' than to have them make it themselves. I know people will say, 'so let them get a certified one!' Well... just well... They still have the freedom to go out and buy an experimental that was constructed by someone else, under the rights allowed the person that built it, as educational/recreational. Until the regulations are change to allow people to build airplanes for hire, and not have to be certified, that is the only way to go, except the limitations of LSA. You don't like a reg, get it changed. You don't have the right to screw it up for me, when I decide to build-legally, under the current amateur built provisions. -- Jim in NC |
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cavelamb himself wrote:
Jim Logajan wrote: Jim Logajan wrote: The FAA is about to make it a whole hell of a lot harder for people to build safe amateur built aircraft. Richard VanGrunsven, founder of one of the most successful kit aircraft companies, has written up a warning and a call to arms about the issue. You can read it beginning on page 3 of this document: http://doc.vansaircraft.com/RVator/2...008-RVator.pdf Also consider using this site (to save Vans Aircraft some bandwidth load): http://www.vansairforce.net/rvator/1-2008-RVator.pdf Sounds more like they want to make it harder to_have_one_built_for_you. That appears to be what the FAA wants. But IMHO the changes the FAA is considering appear unlikely to accomplish that goal. Consider Joe Homebuilder and friends who invest in a lot of equipment and somehow set up an assembly-line-like operation and build homebuilts from "raw" material. If they fill out all the paperwork legal and proper, on what basis could the FAA claim that they had not "fabricated and assembled the majority portion of the aircraft for their own education or recreation?" These articles explain the FAA's concerns over excessive commercial abuses of the Experimental Amateur Built (E-AB) licensing category. The ARC committee was created as an FAA/EAA/ Industry process to address the FAA concerns and to recommend corrective actions. I believe Van pointed out that the FAA appears to be ignoring the concerns raised by some members of the ARC if shared credit is disallowed for the tasks on the form 8000-38 checklist. He was on the committee and clearly got negative vibes from the FAA members - and appears to be concerned enough about the impact on the entire field that he felt compelled to write his "call to arms." (If suppose if one believes that pounding 10,000 rivets is instructional and/or recreational but pounding 1000 rivets is not, fine. No accounting for taste. ;-)) |
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