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#1
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I expect to get my PPL soon and serioulsy consider to build an
airplane simply because it's cheaper. I naturally come here to sort for help from you, the veteran builders (both skills and age. I am in 20s and I read the average age of kit plane builders is over 50--this scares me.) Here are my requirements for the "dream plane" at this stage: 1. must be easy and fast to build. Builder assist program or fast build kit will be perfect. Prefer proven designs. Yes, I think I will get more fun out of flying. 2. must be good IFR platform. I will install IFR panel and get my IFR training in the aircraft. 3. engine power up to 180 hp. reason: this is the maximum power the engine can use auto gas (Jabiru 5100) because the places I will likely fly around unlikely have 100LL fuel supply. 4. must have good performance at high altitude (take-off, climb). I will very likely from time to time fly in high altitude terrain (airports or strips often at above 12,000 feet) . 5. must have off-airport t/o and landing capacity, but STOL is not a must because those places I will likely fly to have wide open fields just the surface is rough (even barely having grass.) 6. must have acceptable cross country capability, i.e. cruise speed, range, cabin comfortability etc. 7. load, load, load. I would prefer a 2+2 type aircraft, but 2-seaters having big load capacity are also perfect since I will probably use the rear cabin of the 2+2 plane for cargo load most time anyway. I know it's a long list (how long are yours, just curious?), but as you've probably read from the list, I have a tight budget and will probably fly this plane for a long time before I could afford another kit or new certified one, so I really want to find a good balanced aircraft. BTW, I won't consider used certified aircrafts because I just can't fly them in those places. Where will I fly around? You guess....for sure it's not in this country. Thanks a lot in advance. Xin |
#2
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![]() I expect to get my PPL soon and serioulsy consider to build an airplane simply because it's cheaper. If you are considering just the cost of the plane it might be cheaper. But if you factor in all of the tools and heated/airconditioned shop needed to build a plane the cost rises quickely. I am in 20s and I read the average age of kit plane builders is over 50--this scares me.) Earning the money for, and acquiring the above mentioned tools takes time for most of us. And if you decide to have a family along the way life kind of has a way of taking your time........... I like to build things and would have bought the tools and shop anyway. But if you want to fly, buy. I could have bought several nice planes for what I have invested in my hobby. |
#3
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Ok, mine in a plans built rather than a kitplane.
But they are sorta similar. When I started this project I was living in an apartment. Upstairs. The fuselage went together at the airport, then, on the gear, it went up on a 12' flatbed trailer. Actually had it in the parking lot of my apartment complex for over a year. I got a bit done on it there. The turtleback formers and stringers, firewall, and panel were all built on the trailer. Rudder pedals, tailwheel, etc too. Mostly drilling and bolting then, so the inverter in my old pickup powered the drill, or saber saw. Sorta side stepped that whole extension cord problem... It drew a lot of interest from the neighborhood. Being an Air Force community, most recognized it as a potential aeroplane, but one guy thought it was a pretty clever moble deer stand. Go figger. And nobody ever bothered anything. But you can't really build a complete airplane that way. Oh maybe SOME poor body might, but it's not practical. My new parasol is going to break $5000. The cover job (all Stits) and big engine pushed it over. It took an extra year and another $12,000 to build the shop. And another year to pay for it. Draw any conclusion you wish, but it takes money. Even to build a cheap airplane... Richard http://home.flash.net/~lamb01/ |
#4
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On 01 Sep 2003 04:32 PM, Shin Gou posted the following:
I expect to get my PPL soon and serioulsy consider to build an airplane simply because it's cheaper. I naturally come here to sort for help from you, the veteran builders (both skills and age. I am in 20s and I read the average age of kit plane builders is over 50--this scares me.) Here are my requirements for the "dream plane" at this stage: snip You might consider the Bearhawk, even though it probably has more STOL capability than you need. The prototype gets good performance with a 180hp lycoming and several builders have installed/are installing IFR panels. I believe the kit company has a builders' assistance center in Florida. http://www.bearhawkaircraft.com/ ---------------------------------------------------- Del Rawlins- Remove _kills_spammers_ to reply via email. Unofficial Bearhawk FAQ website: http://www.rawlinsbrothers.org/bhfaq/ |
#5
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Thanks Del,
I was not aware of the Bearhawk. Looks like a great design. Aviation is amazing. You study it for years and still find more that you did not know. James Del Rawlins wrote in message ... On 01 Sep 2003 04:32 PM, Shin Gou posted the following: I expect to get my PPL soon and serioulsy consider to build an airplane simply because it's cheaper. I naturally come here to sort for help from you, the veteran builders (both skills and age. I am in 20s and I read the average age of kit plane builders is over 50--this scares me.) Here are my requirements for the "dream plane" at this stage: snip You might consider the Bearhawk, even though it probably has more STOL capability than you need. The prototype gets good performance with a 180hp lycoming and several builders have installed/are installing IFR panels. I believe the kit company has a builders' assistance center in Florida. http://www.bearhawkaircraft.com/ ---------------------------------------------------- Del Rawlins- Remove _kills_spammers_ to reply via email. Unofficial Bearhawk FAQ website: http://www.rawlinsbrothers.org/bhfaq/ |
#7
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Xin,
You could consider picking up an unfinished BD-4 kit. There are some listed at the classifieds at http://bd-4.org. This should get you a 180 MPH (on 180 HP) 2+2 for less money than with any other design. It is proven (34 years of history), you can slap in a wide variety of power plants and the simple construction will make it easier to fix a damage when you're at places like you described. If the places you want to land are really rough a Bearhawk is the better alternative. The quickbuild kit runs you around $24k. Lots of space and payload. Your requirements catalog reads a bit like mine when I decided to get one of the affordable BD-4 projects and add utility by converting it to tail wheel (was tri), beefing up the landing gear and making the fuselage longer and a bit higher (mine is a true 4 seat aircraft). It has been done by others before and flown, so I felt quite safe doing these modifications. Why can't you fly a certified plane in the country you are talking about? Which country is it anyway? - Holger On Mon, 01 Sep 2003 17:32:28 +0000, Shin Gou wrote: I expect to get my PPL soon and serioulsy consider to build an airplane simply because it's cheaper. I naturally come here to sort for help from you, the veteran builders (both skills and age. I am in 20s and I read the average age of kit plane builders is over 50--this scares me.) Here are my requirements for the "dream plane" at this stage: .... |
#8
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Thanks very much for the helpful and prompt replies. Here are my
answers to your questions and some follow-up questions. I hope this thread wouldn't go toooo long. Xin What you want isn't what most would consider a budget plane but since you didn't say how little you want to spent how about a murphy moose. Lots of stability for IFR and tons of payload with a 360hp. autofeul buning engine. A 360hp engine using mogas? I'd be a little skeptical about using it with confidence even if it works. What engine is it? You might consider the Bearhawk, even though it probably has more STOL capability than you need. The prototype gets good performance with a 180hp lycoming and several builders have installed/are installing IFR panels. I believe the kit company has a builders' assistance center in Florida. http://www.bearhawkaircraft.com/ This one will be on my list. Generally, you can buy a finished homebuilt for about the amount of money that the builder put in it. If you could find a Bearhawk or a V6 STOL, or one of the big Murphys (the Moose or the Super Rebel) and you can afford it or finance it, you'd be ahead. If you want to build, build. If you want to fly, buy. Actually, I am looking for a nice used homebuilt. Xin, You could consider picking up an unfinished BD-4 kit. There are some listed at the classifieds at http://bd-4.org. This should get you a 180 MPH (on 180 HP) 2+2 for less money than with any other design. It is proven (34 years of history), you can slap in a wide variety of power plants and the simple construction will make it easier to fix a damage when you're at places like you described. If the places you want to land are really rough a Bearhawk is the better alternative. The quickbuild kit runs you around $24k. Lots of space and payload. Your requirements catalog reads a bit like mine when I decided to get one of the affordable BD-4 projects and add utility by converting it to tail wheel (was tri), beefing up the landing gear and making the fuselage longer and a bit higher (mine is a true 4 seat aircraft). It has been done by others before and flown, so I felt quite safe doing these modifications. Why can't you fly a certified plane in the country you are talking about? Which country is it anyway? - Holger Thanks, Holger. I've been told and have been noticing BD-4, very nice design. But the only thing is I really prefer a builder assist program. But BD-4 will be on my list—maybe not at the top. I just can't fly a USED certified plane in...........China. I am from China and work in DC now. China prohibits imports of used planes and cars(reason? I wish I could read the government's mind. But sometimes they are very simple, maybe just to save face.) All airspace is dual controlled from the ground by civilian regulator and the military. Flying a Cessna 172 or so is extremely hassle and expensive. But the tricky thing is there's no rule upon kit or plan-built planes. Maybe the government never thought its people would build airplanes. So if I keep a low profile, I can fly such a plane without filing and paying a flight plan up to one week ahead, paying for each t/o and landing, paying for the use of airspace, paying for ATC........etc etc. But hey, the other side of the coin of unrule is that if I **** off someone, every government agency can kick my ass. All right, enough whines. Here's how I think I am going to use the plane. I live in southwest China very close to Tibet area. The landscape in this part of the country is gorgeous, i.e. very high mountains and deep gorges, grass land, huge desert etc everything you can imagine ideal for hikers and photographers but tough if not scaring for pilots and their planes. No avgas, rough fields but wide open. I have to admit now I am really interested in the French Dyn Aero's MCR series, especially the bushplane and the 4-seater versions. They are more expensive, but much faster, and highly regarded in Europe (assuming proven design). But seems their American distributor American Ghiles Aircraft's website is down, and I can't even find much info. about this aircraft's flying in the US at google. I am still open to other plane choices. Xin |
#9
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"Shin Gou" wrote in message
om... A 360hp engine using mogas? I'd be a little skeptical about using it with confidence even if it works. What engine is it? Xin........... My Corvette burns mogas. No problem with 360 hp. Actually, I am looking for a nice used homebuilt. Good thinking! I just can't fly a USED certified plane in...........China. I am from China and work in DC now. China prohibits imports of used planes and cars(reason? I wish I could read the government's mind. But sometimes they are very simple, maybe just to save face.) All airspace is dual controlled from the ground by civilian regulator and the military. Flying a Cessna 172 or so is extremely hassle and expensive. But the tricky thing is there's no rule upon kit or plan-built planes. Maybe the government never thought its people would build airplanes. So if I keep a low profile, I can fly such a plane without filing and paying a flight plan up to one week ahead, paying for each t/o and landing, paying for the use of airspace, paying for ATC........etc etc. But hey, the other side of the coin of unrule is that if I **** off someone, every government agency can kick my ass. All right, enough whines. Here's how I think I am going to use the plane. I live in southwest China very close to Tibet area. The landscape in this part of the country is gorgeous, i.e. very high mountains and deep gorges, grass land, huge desert etc everything you can imagine ideal for hikers and photographers but tough if not scaring for pilots and their planes. No avgas, rough fields but wide open. I am still open to other plane choices. Xin You the man!!! If everyone in China had your mindset, our countries would be as close as they were 60 years ago. I applaud you. Rich "You need a Harrier" S. |
#10
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On 02 Sep 2003 12:08 PM, Shin Gou posted the following:
A 360hp engine using mogas? I'd be a little skeptical about using it with confidence even if it works. What engine is it? The Moose uses the Russian M-14P radial, which I am told burns mogas just fine, along with (and I quote) "whatever the russians call gasoline. " There is a builder installing this engine in a Bearhawk, but since it is a slightly smaller, lighter plane than the Moose it is requiring some airframe mods and probably is more trouble than it is worth, considering that the 260hp (lycoming, also autogas) version is reputed to climb like a raped ape and doesn't need the airframe mods. I believe there is/was a Chinese version of the M-14P but I don't think it made the full 360hp. If the engines/parts are available in your country that might be a deciding factor. Flying a Cessna 172 or so is extremely hassle and expensive. But the tricky thing is there's no rule upon kit or plan-built planes. Maybe the government never thought its people would build airplanes. So if I keep a low profile, I can fly such a plane without filing and paying a flight plan up to one week ahead, paying for each t/o and landing, paying for the use of airspace, paying for ATC........etc etc. But hey, the other side of the coin of unrule is that if I **** off someone, every government agency can kick my ass. That's harsh. Best of luck to you. ---------------------------------------------------- Del Rawlins- Remove _kills_spammers_ to reply via email. Unofficial Bearhawk FAQ website: http://www.rawlinsbrothers.org/bhfaq/ |
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