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Working on experimentals
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densing(at)carolina.rr.co
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PostPosted: Wed Jan 11, 2006 9:24 am    Post subject: Working on experimentals Reply with quote


You do not have to be the builder of the airplane to work on it. If you sell
an airplane the new owner can work on it. The Condition Inspection can only
be done by the person holding the Repairman Certificate or an an A&P.
The Repairman Certificate gives you the privilege of doing the Condition
Inspection on only the designated airplane.
Dale Ensing


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sawad13(at)msn.com
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PostPosted: Wed Jan 11, 2006 9:45 am    Post subject: Working on experimentals Reply with quote


Dale, that was what I had heard many times before.
Ron Awad
Quote:
From: "Dale Ensing" <densing(at)carolina.rr.com>
Reply-To: rvsoutheast-list(at)matronics.com
To: <rvsoutheast-list(at)matronics.com>
Subject: Re: Working on experimentals
Date: Wed, 11 Jan 2006 12:24:55 -0500
<densing(at)carolina.rr.com>
You do not have to be the builder of the airplane to work on it. If you
sell
an airplane the new owner can work on it. The Condition Inspection can only
be done by the person holding the Repairman Certificate or an an A&P.
The Repairman Certificate gives you the privilege of doing the Condition
Inspection on only the designated airplane.
Dale Ensing


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Steve Glasgow



Joined: 10 Jan 2006
Posts: 674

PostPosted: Wed Jan 11, 2006 10:02 am    Post subject: Working on experimentals Reply with quote


Cappy stands corrected. However, I still feel it may be problematic in regards to liability.
Steve Glasgow-Cappy
N123SG RV-8
Cappy's Toy
704-362-0005
704-281-7884
-


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Steve Glasgow-Cappy
Cappy's Toy
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sportav8r(at)aol.com
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PostPosted: Wed Jan 11, 2006 10:33 am    Post subject: Working on experimentals Reply with quote


I think it depends on what is meant by "work on it." Sure, you can add oil, and air the tires, but you can't replace avionics or install an autopilot or build a cooling plenum without the required credentials. IIRC, without the repaiman cert or an A&P license, it's no different that what spam owners are allowed to do as "owner maintenance."


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robbie(at)atlanticpkg.com
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PostPosted: Wed Jan 11, 2006 10:59 am    Post subject: Working on experimentals Reply with quote


Nope. This has been covered ad nauseum elsewhere. Those rules only
apply to certificated aircraft. ANYONE can work on an experimental,
whether they're the builder or not; even rebuild the wing!
Only the annual condition inspection must be done by an A&P or the
original builder with a Repairman's Certificate. If the original
builder is not issued a repairman's certificate for some reason, he
can't do the inspection either.
Whether it's WISE for ANYONE to work on the plane is another matter.
Robbie Walker
Arr-Vee-Wanna-Bee


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sportav8r(at)aol.com
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PostPosted: Wed Jan 11, 2006 11:13 am    Post subject: Working on experimentals Reply with quote


Well, okay- guess I was wrong. I'll consider it settled when Eddie Shields weighs in on it or someone provides a reference as to "elsewhere."


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robbie(at)atlanticpkg.com
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PostPosted: Wed Jan 11, 2006 1:18 pm    Post subject: Working on experimentals Reply with quote


Not only that, but you don't need a tailwheel, complex, or high-power
endorsement to operate an experimental (as long as you aren't
carrying any passengers)
FAR 61.31(k)(2)(iii)(B)
Robbie Walker


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robbie(at)atlanticpkg.com
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PostPosted: Wed Jan 11, 2006 1:30 pm    Post subject: Working on experimentals Reply with quote


Let me clarify, that I at least have a MORE SENSE than to try this, I
was just pointing out the differences between experimental and
certificated.
Personally the idea of trying to "learn by doing" something like
tailwheel operations or aerobatics scares the WILLIES outta me...
Weight Loss Update: 15 lbs and dropping, but I had a gout flare-up
last night so I've gotta get off the low carb long enough to get the
purines outta my system. Maybe I'll fit in a RV-7 instead of an 8?
Robbie Walker


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ceengland(at)bellsouth.ne
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PostPosted: Wed Jan 11, 2006 3:27 pm    Post subject: Working on experimentals Reply with quote


sportav8r(at)aol.com wrote:
Quote:

Well, okay- guess I was wrong. I'll consider it settled when Eddie Shields weighs in on it or someone provides a reference as to "elsewhere."

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Ed Anderson



Joined: 10 Jan 2006
Posts: 475

PostPosted: Wed Jan 11, 2006 4:12 pm    Post subject: Working on experimentals Reply with quote


---


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Ed Anderson
Rv-6A N494BW Rotary Powered
Matthews, NC
eanderson@carolina.rr.com
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sportav8r(at)aol.com
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PostPosted: Wed Jan 11, 2006 6:39 pm    Post subject: Working on experimentals Reply with quote


You jerkin' my chain, Charlie?


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ceengland(at)bellsouth.ne
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PostPosted: Wed Jan 11, 2006 7:51 pm    Post subject: Working on experimentals Reply with quote


sportav8r(at)aol.com wrote:
Quote:

You jerkin' my chain, Charlie?

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sawad13(at)msn.com
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PostPosted: Thu Jan 12, 2006 6:22 am    Post subject: Working on experimentals Reply with quote

Stormy I disagree

Ron Awad

[quote]From: sportav8r(at)aol.com
Reply-To: rvsoutheast-list(at)matronics.com
To: rvsoutheast-list(at)matronics.com
Subject: Re: Working on experimentals
Date: Wed, 11 Jan 2006 13:33:17 -0500



I think it depends on what is meant by "work on it." Sure, you can add
oil, and air the tires, but you can't replace avionics or install an
autopilot or build a cooling plenum without the required credentials.
IIRC, without the repaiman cert or an A&P license, it's no different that
what spam owners are allowed to do as "owner maintenance."

My $.02

-Stormy

--


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sawad13(at)msn.com
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PostPosted: Thu Jan 12, 2006 6:24 am    Post subject: Working on experimentals Reply with quote

Yeah I was waiting for this to be settled before I dropped that bombshell on
them Robbie!


Ron Awad

[quote]From: Robbie Walker <robbie(at)atlanticpkg.com>
Reply-To: rvsoutheast-list(at)matronics.com
To: rvsoutheast-list(at)matronics.com
Subject: Re: Working on experimentals
Date: Wed, 11 Jan 2006 16:17:39 -0500


<robbie(at)atlanticpkg.com>

Not only that, but you don't need a tailwheel, complex, or high-power
endorsement to operate an experimental (as long as you aren't
carrying any passengers)

FAR 61.31(k)(2)(iii)(B)

Robbie Walker
______________________________
That ideas should spread from one to another over the globe, for the
moral and mutual instruction of man, and improvement of his
condition, seems to have been peculiarly and benevolently designed by
nature, when she made them, like fire, expansible over all space,
without lessening their density at any point, and like the air in
which we breathe, move, and have our physical being, incapable of
confinement or exclusive appropriation.
Inventions then cannot, in nature, be a subject of property.
-- Thomas Jefferson
On Jan 11, 2006, at 2:13 PM, sportav8r(at)aol.com wrote:

>
>
> Well, okay- guess I was wrong. I'll consider it settled when
> Eddie Shields weighs in on it or someone provides a reference as to
> "elsewhere."
>
> If that's how it really is, it seems like disaster waiting to happen.
>
> -Stormy
>
> --


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sportav8r(at)aol.com
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PostPosted: Thu Jan 12, 2006 10:51 am    Post subject: Working on experimentals Reply with quote

Very pithy, Ron Wink

After reading the preceeding comments from this morning, I am inclined to disagree with myself, too. I take back all that I said, and admit that I was laboring under a misconception. My $.02 was worth $0.00!

I am still not comfortable with any ol' yahoo being able to wrench on an experimental plane, then carry passengers in said plane, and have no one check his work until annual condition inspection time, at which point he might just take his airframe logbook and checkbook to a restaurant for what we call around here a "New London Special" (Eddie S. will know what I mean). In that case, his workmanship is not only uninformed by any familiarity with the plane during construction, but is never inspected by anyone, period (until the NTSB shows up).

One thing I did learn from all this is that I should get my op lims out of that moldy envelope in the glove box and read whether I should have called the FSDO about those autopilots last year and the new panel going in. I may need to apply for new op lims; do I recall a discussion of this awhile back, with the EAA offering to help (something to do with congested area overflights)? Fill me in...

Best,

-Stormy

--


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sportav8r(at)aol.com
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PostPosted: Thu Jan 12, 2006 10:56 am    Post subject: Working on experimentals Reply with quote

Let me add that I'd be okay with all this if an A&P sign-off was required before returning the plane to service, vs. once a year, but that is obviously not the case. Apparently a Repairman Cert is not especially useful or distinguishing to its holder more than once per annum. I wonder if that was the original intent.

-Stormy

--


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ceengland(at)bellsouth.ne
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PostPosted: Thu Jan 12, 2006 12:01 pm    Post subject: Working on experimentals Reply with quote

sportav8r(at)aol.com wrote:

Quote:


Very pithy, Ron Wink

After reading the preceeding comments from this morning, I am inclined to disagree with myself, too. I take back all that I said, and admit that I was laboring under a misconception. My $.02 was worth $0.00!

I am still not comfortable with any ol' yahoo being able to wrench on an experimental plane, then carry passengers in said plane, and have no one check his work until annual condition inspection time, at which point he might just take his airframe logbook and checkbook to a restaurant for what we call around here a "New London Special" (Eddie S. will know what I mean). In that case, his workmanship is not only uninformed by any familiarity with the plane during construction, but is never inspected by anyone, period (until the NTSB shows up).

One thing I did learn from all this is that I should get my op lims out of that moldy envelope in the glove box and read whether I should have called the FSDO about those autopilots last year and the new panel going in. I may need to apply for new op lims; do I recall a discussion of this awhile back, with the EAA offering to help (something to do with congested area overflights)? Fill me in...

Best,

-Stormy


I've 'upgraded' oplims on 2 different -4's that I didn't build. The 1st
was over 5 years ago, when the new rules came out allowing you to sign
off major alterations yourself. At that time, once you had the new
wording in hand (including a defined test area) you could make any major
change, make a log entry re-entering phase 1, fly 5 hours doing all
required tests (Ha...) and make another log entry returning the plane to
phase 2.

The 2nd was a couple of years ago, post 911 & the new wording is similar
but with a major difference: you must contact the FAA & get confirmation
that your defined test area is still acceptable. I was a bit ticked
about this change & asked 'Das Fed' on the RV-list about it & he said
that it was a nation-wide mandated change. Obviously, it's still a lot
better than the old oplims where there had to be a complete reissuance
of your paperwork any time there's a major change. If you haven't
changed an old oplim to reflect the self-sign-off features, you are
still obligated to go through all the old monkey motion. Odds are, most
FAA offices will issue the new oplims the 1st time you notify them of a
major mod just to cut down on their headaches in the future.

Anything that's not a minor mod (spelled out somewhere in the FAR's) is
a major mod. I would never point out that on an experimental a/c with no
log entries or photographic evidence proving it's original
configuration, changes are for all practical purposes undetectable.
Unless, of course, you log the update or it's something like a Trutrak
that wasn't available when the plane was 1st signed off. Props *don't*
fit this description because they almost always appear somewhere in the
paperwork. That's probably the easiest way for insurance companies to
not pay, since many, many owners neglect to notify the FAA when they
change props.

At the risk of sounding like a Libertarian, I feel the need to point out
that virtually all regulations, including FAA regulations, exist to
enable taxation or limit competition, rather than promote safety. Even
though I didn't build any of the experimentals I've owned, I'm confident
that I'm at least as qualified to inspect them as a typical a&p or ia,
because they've never touched an experimental. The same is true for less
common factory planes like the Swift. Most Swift owners know more about
their planes than the ia's that are available in their area, because the
ia's have never touched one. When I was 1/2 owner of a Swift, our ia
basically "P51'd" (Parker once made a pen with that identifier) any work
we did. If I bought Ed Anderson's RV-6A with a Mazda engine, which ia
should I call to maintain & inspect it?

I think my fever is breaking now, so maybe it's time to stop my rant. Smile

Have fun in Lakeland.

Charlie


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robbie(at)atlanticpkg.com
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PostPosted: Thu Jan 12, 2006 4:22 pm    Post subject: Working on experimentals Reply with quote

Guys I certainly wasn't trying to start anything. When I "were
learnin'" about homebuilding I noticed this particular aspect of the
maintenance rules and it stuck with me. Certainly interesting stuff.

Stormy (who I don't think I've ever met...), I agree with you in
principle. One of the other lists I follow is the Quad-City
Challenger list. At one time I was considering that plane as a
"starter homebuilt". One of the more tragic stories related on that
list was of a dentist and his wife. Apparently this couple was as
nice & decent as you'd ever meet. The dentist was a very good stick
too. In an effort to increase the travel of his elevator he moved the
pivot attach to the other side of the elevator. With no mechanical
stop in the design, his modification allowed him (and his wife) to
take off, but they didn't survive the crash. The elevator "flipped"
over.

It seems pointless to discuss the merits of the idea after their
tragic death, but the lesson from this mistake is obvious.

NB: I've probably got the details of the story wrong, but the gist is
accurate and sobering.

Robbie Walker
______________________________
I can speak French but I cannot understand it.
-- Mark Twain
On Jan 12, 2006, at 1:55 PM, sportav8r(at)aol.com wrote:

[quote]

Let me add that I'd be okay with all this if an A&P sign-off was
required before returning the plane to service, vs. once a year,
but that is obviously not the case. Apparently a Repairman Cert is
not especially useful or distinguishing to its holder more than
once per annum. I wonder if that was the original intent.

-Stormy

--


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sportav8r(at)aol.com
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PostPosted: Thu Jan 12, 2006 6:55 pm    Post subject: Working on experimentals Reply with quote

Au contraire, Robbie; I have a Green Sea Fly-In certificate from you.

We've met; the pleasure was apparently all mine Wink

Stormy / N30YD

--


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sawad13(at)msn.com
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PostPosted: Thu Jan 12, 2006 8:21 pm    Post subject: Working on experimentals Reply with quote

Stormy, if you think about..... On our RV airplanes, they are not really all
that experimental. Other than a few like Ed Anderson who are "experimenting"
with auto engines, and some who try different cowl mods etc...

Our RV's are pretty much per plans and Most people - be it the pilot, the
owner, the mechanics, the passengers - they all can expect a certain
something of the plane. This is probably one reason insurance for a RV is
not too expensive.

But what if you or I decided to make our own plane from scratch. What if we
decided to power it with 4 Briggs lawnmower engines linked to turn one prop,
and we decided to make it a TriWing, and maybe we want to do some other
weird stuff like put both a nose wheel and a tailwheel and make the plane
able to use either depending on field and wind conditions. Maybe we decide
to make the plane out of molded plastic or half aluminum and half wood....
I could go on and on, but my point is that on " our " homemade plane there
is nothing that is a given about it and nothing about it is "certain" other
than we made it ourselves.

The beauty of Amauter build Experimental rules we have here in the USA is
that we could build a kit from Vans and have pretty much as good of a
airplane as any Cessna and have the flexibilty to do our own maintance and
annuals, plus do modifications as we see fit..... but we also have it good
in that we can truely experiment, even if it is not what you or I or the
engineers at Cessna thinks is safe.

As for passengers.... this is the reason for the words WARNING EXPERIMENTAL
in bold letters to be in plain view. This is a warning and any passenger-
and really any pilot- should take very seriously. I mean who in the world
would go to some fair or theme park and hop on a roller coaster someone
designed on a paper towel and had the words WARNING HOME BUILT EXPERIMENTAL
ROLLER COASTER ?????????? Not me!!!
Now up until a year or so ago the rules about flying a experimental were
even very loose. By this I mean that say that the rules were, any person
holding ANY pilot certificate rating higher than Glider - it could be
Rotorcraft, or Fixed Wing - could fly any type of Experimental..... AND
carry passengers, all without specific type requirements. Example, A person
with Airplane private pilot certificate Single engine land could legally go
out and buy or build a experimental Helicopter and fly it legally by himself
or with a passenger and legally he would not have to have any helicopter
endorsements, additional ratings, or even the first hour of helicopter
instruction.

Why would the rules allow for such madness???

It goes back to the intent of the whole class of being experimental. And it
makes it easy to experiment......

For example, what if you took your typical RV-6 airframe. To fly it as a
Certified plane you would need SEL airplane. If has a tailwheel so you would
also need a tailwheel endorsement. Then you "experiment" and add floats to
land it on the lake, so now you need a seaplane endorsement too. Later you
decide to boost the engines power to 230 hp so now you need a Hi performance
endorsement. After a year or two your bored so you come up with a plan to
add a pylon and you install a set of rotorblades above the thing so once you
takeoff you can fly it as a autogyro, this way you will never have to worry
about stalling while your flying slow over the lake. So now you need a
Rotorcraft / Gyroplane add-on to your certificate. Later you decide if you
power the rotors you could hover and this would allow you to land it and
takeoff from the small pond behind your house, so now you need to go and get
your helicopter add-on as well.................... Now is this a likely
thing, A RV-6 turned into a helicopter on floats? Probably never, but the
beauty of our laws is we got the freedom to do that, and the additional
freedom to do it without having to become over burdened with rules and regs
and so on to do it.

The laws are always changing and one day I would not be surprised to see
these freedoms taken away.

Already the laws have changed as far as carrying passengers go. If you want
to carry a passenger in a experimental aircraft today, you need the most
approriate rating for the type of aircraft it is. So if it is a Rotorway
Exec helicopter you will need a Private Pilot rating Rotorcraft/helicopter.
If it is a Vans RV-4 like mine, you will need a PP SEL with tailwheel
endorsement. YOU can still fly ANY experimental with ANY rating - airplane
pilot flying a helicopter for example - but only solo, no passengers without
specific type rating.

Ron Awad

[quote]From: sportav8r(at)aol.com
Reply-To: rvsoutheast-list(at)matronics.com
To: rvsoutheast-list(at)matronics.com
Subject: Re: Working on experimentals
Date: Thu, 12 Jan 2006 13:51:16 -0500



Very pithy, Ron Wink

After reading the preceeding comments from this morning, I am inclined to
disagree with myself, too. I take back all that I said, and admit that I
was laboring under a misconception. My $.02 was worth $0.00!

I am still not comfortable with any ol' yahoo being able to wrench on an
experimental plane, then carry passengers in said plane, and have no one
check his work until annual condition inspection time, at which point he
might just take his airframe logbook and checkbook to a restaurant for what
we call around here a "New London Special" (Eddie S. will know what I
mean). In that case, his workmanship is not only uninformed by any
familiarity with the plane during construction, but is never inspected by
anyone, period (until the NTSB shows up).

One thing I did learn from all this is that I should get my op lims out of
that moldy envelope in the glove box and read whether I should have called
the FSDO about those autopilots last year and the new panel going in. I
may need to apply for new op lims; do I recall a discussion of this awhile
back, with the EAA offering to help (something to do with congested area
overflights)? Fill me in...

Best,

-Stormy

--


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