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#11
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On Fri, 25 Jul 2003 15:35:24 -0400, David O
wrote: There have been many posts in recent months by people contemplating their own complicated and even radical designs. Reading between the lines, it appears that many of those people have yet to build their first plane. May I kindly suggest that one's first plane should be a time-proved kit or plans-built plane with no major builder modifications. Build it, fly it, and maintain it for several hundred hours. After you've accomplished this, revisit your fancy schmancy dream machine. I expect that by that time, for most people anyway, reality will have dawned. I look at what I fly...A Debonair (cheap version of the straight tailed Bonanza) I look at what I've been building for a couple of years... glasair-III and I've accumulated almost a whole hour flying one :-)) Were I going to try to utilize all the features I've seen listed, I'd build *at least* two planes. So my go faster, high performance plane lands closer to a hundred than fourty...I don't mind that. So, the STOL will only cruise at 160 to 180 knots...That's a pretty good range even if it does take a pretty good sized engine and drink gas like crazy. So, it takes two planes to do it. That ain't bad. It could take 3 or 4. and...by the time I finish the G-III I'll be too old to build another any way. Roger Halstead (K8RI EN73 & ARRL Life Member) www.rogerhalstead.com N833R World's oldest Debonair? (S# CD-2) David O -- http://www.AirplaneZone.com -- Oshkosh Bound!!! |
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