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do you really build flying things...



 
 
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  #11  
Old February 25th 04, 12:39 AM
Ernest Christley
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Mike Henley wrote:
Ernest Christley wrote in message .com...


I wouldn't be so sure. It wasn't such a long time ago that I had the
same astonishment at the idea. Remember, our public education system
and popular culture in general is now designed to weed out and destroy
anything resembling initiative or self dependance. If it ain't store
bought, it's redneck. 12 years of such meticulous brainwashing is VERY
hard to overcome.



i'm not trolling, just curious... jumping off a balcony sounds
dangerous enough to me, let alone flying a homebuilt flying machine...

do you have to have some pro experience or can anyone build such a
thingie...


You don't have to have a pro's advice, though you will want it. Often.
And with pictures.

Anyone CAN build and airplane, though very few WANT to. A lot of people
THINK they want to, until they start trying. It's a tough bear to
wrestle. The page below has a link to a FAQ that'll tell you what you
want to know to get started.

http://www.wanttaja.com/avlinks/index.htm

--
http://www.ernest.isa-geek.org/
"Ignorance is mankinds normal state,
alleviated by information and experience."
Veeduber
  #12  
Old February 25th 04, 12:53 AM
nauga
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Mike Henley wrote:

do you have to have some pro experience or can anyone build such a
thingie...


I'd never done any sheet metal work until I started an
all-aluminum RV-4. You certainly don't need 'pro
experience.' What really helps is talking to people,
pros and amateurs, who have done it before. Building
is, in general, not a difficult task, it's a whole
looooong series of fairly easy ones strung together.
When you're starting patience is probably a better
quality than experience, 'cause you'll gain experience
(and occasionally lose patience) as you go.

A quick scan through the past few months on this
newsgroup will show you a handful of first flights -
people putting their soft, pink bodies behind the
controls of an airplane they built, and going flying.
Myself included. I've flown in and flown some pretty
impressive stuff, but I can honestly say that nothing
compares to leaving the ground in something you built
yourself. I'm still grinning.

So Bob Reed, Del Rawlins, Corky Scott, Mike Pilla,
Steve Genotte, et. al., get to work! g

Dave 'hinge-head' Hyde




  #13  
Old February 25th 04, 05:30 AM
RobertR237
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So Bob Reed, Del Rawlins, Corky Scott, Mike Pilla,
Steve Genotte, et. al., get to work! g

Dave 'hinge-head' Hyde



I haven't given up but a little thing like money keeps getting in the way right
now. Some good news though, just landed a 6-month contract that should keep
the vultures at bay for a while. Bad news is that it is out of town and
doesn't leave time to build.

Never say die though, work will continue at some time in the future.

Bob Reed
www.kisbuild.r-a-reed-assoc.com (KIS Builders Site)
KIS Cruiser in progress...Slow but steady progress....

"Ladies and Gentlemen, take my advice,
pull down your pants and Slide on the Ice!"
(M.A.S.H. Sidney Freedman)

  #15  
Old February 25th 04, 04:05 PM
Wright1902Glider
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A few of us even build some REALLY OLD SCARRY stuff! Yep, that's my plane...
its not much of a plane, but I'm kind-of attached to it.

Harry
  #17  
Old February 25th 04, 07:14 PM
Big John
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Corky

Didn't P...... (can't spell his name) build the first one that started
EAA in his basement?

If there's a will, there's a way.

Big John

On Tue, 24 Feb 2004 17:19:18 GMT,
(Corky Scott) wrote:

On 23 Feb 2004 14:14:53 -0800,
(Mike Henley) wrote:

i found this while searching for uk.comp.homebuilt... do you guys
really build flying things... i mean, seriously, can you ride in
something you built and trust its safety, or do you just build toy
remote controlled stuff...



Check out :
http://www.eaa.org/ Mike. It's a site devoted to the EAA
organization that oversee's the world of homebuilding. And
incidently, runs the worlds biggest airshow every year. That's bigger
than any commercial airshow in the world, and it started with guys
building homebuilt airplanes.

Corky Scott


  #18  
Old February 25th 04, 07:44 PM
pacplyer
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Richard Riley wrote snip

I'd rather trust the safety of something that I built than something
built by people that drink beer with lunch and go home at 5pm. Like
the damned Chrystler I just bought.


Man you said it Richard. This is what possessed me to finish my A&P
and start pulling my own annuals. Some of the work was so horrible on
my "certified" Apache 235 that I was amazed it was even signed off.
One of the replaced plexi-glass windscreens had a three-eights inch
gap under the bottom (cut wrong & no sealant,) hidden by the
windshield trim, that allowed rain to blow back and drip down into the
radio stack. I was in holding in heavy rain with other targets below
me waiting for the vis to come up at OAK when I lost both comm and
only retained intermittent g/s (leaks in the nose behind the landing
light as well.) The EFC had already passed. Shot a very iffy
approach. Had to call a very unhappy tower crew and approach that
scattered everybody due to my faith in genuine gov certified mechanics
(and my faith in 15,000 dollar annuals.) So now I do it all myself
because I kept hearing "Trust Me.." from mtc shops. But now the water
seeps through the rivets in front of the windshield and still gets
things a little wet! I'm tired of patching up forty-year-old
airframes that suck 30 gal's/hr. I want to build something new all
the way. (not just finish someone else's project.)

But my question is how did successful builders develop the discipline
needed to finish something so time consuming. I look around here and
see all kinds of honey-do's that have been going for years. Not sure
if I can "get the religion." How did you guys that made it to testing
convince yourselves that you could do it?

pac "I don't deal well with failure" plyer
  #19  
Old February 25th 04, 08:07 PM
John Ammeter
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On 25 Feb 2004 11:44:51 -0800,
(pacplyer) wrote:

Richard Riley wrote snip

I'd rather trust the safety of something that I built than something
built by people that drink beer with lunch and go home at 5pm. Like
the damned Chrystler I just bought.


Man you said it Richard. This is what possessed me to finish my A&P
and start pulling my own annuals. Some of the work was so horrible on
my "certified" Apache 235 that I was amazed it was even signed off.
One of the replaced plexi-glass windscreens had a three-eights inch
gap under the bottom (cut wrong & no sealant,) hidden by the
windshield trim, that allowed rain to blow back and drip down into the
radio stack. I was in holding in heavy rain with other targets below
me waiting for the vis to come up at OAK when I lost both comm and
only retained intermittent g/s (leaks in the nose behind the landing
light as well.) The EFC had already passed. Shot a very iffy
approach. Had to call a very unhappy tower crew and approach that
scattered everybody due to my faith in genuine gov certified mechanics
(and my faith in 15,000 dollar annuals.) So now I do it all myself
because I kept hearing "Trust Me.." from mtc shops. But now the water
seeps through the rivets in front of the windshield and still gets
things a little wet! I'm tired of patching up forty-year-old
airframes that suck 30 gal's/hr. I want to build something new all
the way. (not just finish someone else's project.)

But my question is how did successful builders develop the discipline
needed to finish something so time consuming. I look around here and
see all kinds of honey-do's that have been going for years. Not sure
if I can "get the religion." How did you guys that made it to testing
convince yourselves that you could do it?

pac "I don't deal well with failure" plyer



Pac....

First of all, you don't look at the project as being one big
job. Think of it as being many little tasks. Work on each
little task one at a time. I remember building the trim tab
for my RV-6. It took most of a day of puttering about but,
when it was done, I put it with the growing collection of
finished items.

When you can't find anymore small tasks to work on, it's
time to go flying.

Oh, one more thing... work on the plane a little each day.
Keep the project in your basement or garage, not at the
hangar (unless you live in your hangar), so, if you get the
urge to get up at 2:30 AM because you can't sleep, you can
work on the plane for an hour or so.

Don't forget to take a vacation occasionally from the
project. You'll come back refreshed and eager to jump right
back into building.

I worked on my RV-6 three or four nights a week from about
4:30 to 6:30 or 7:00 PM and one of the weekend days. The
weekend day dedicated to the RV was my wifes choice. If she
needed me for something on Saturday then Sunday was the RV
work day. Don't know if you're married or not but, if you
are, remember that whenever your wife calls down to the shop
with the familiar, "Honey, can you help me?" immediately
DROP what you're doing and go help her. Don't ever let her
believe that the airplane is more important than she is....

It took me 3 1/2 years from first hole drilled to first time
the airplane left the ground behind. I could have done it 6
months earlier if I'd had sense enough to keep the plane at
home until EVERY thing was ready for flight except putting
the wings on the plane. I took it to the airport much too
soon and, since the airport was 45 miles away, I lost much
of my work time commuting back and forth.

John Ammeter
  #20  
Old February 25th 04, 08:30 PM
Corky Scott
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On Wed, 25 Feb 2004 13:14:36 -0600, Big John
wrote:

Corky

Didn't P...... (can't spell his name) build the first one that started
EAA in his basement?

If there's a will, there's a way.

Big John


Heh heh, not literally. The Wright brothers built the first one.
Thanks for that straight line though. :-D

The Pietenpol also came before Paul Poberezny, but Paul helped bring
the disparate builders together into an organization. He ended up
being the president for a number of years and pretty much gave the
organization it's life. If asked about those days, he's been quoted
as saying that he never in his life imagined it would build to what it
is today.

Corky Scott

 




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