Zane wrote:Enough!
Buy your plane/kit already.
Zane wrote:Enough!
Rhyppa wrote:Zane, just buy shortfielders $30K 182 and get back in the game. all the plane you'll ever need and big enough to practice baby making and breastfeeding in the back seat. Try that in one of the kit builds.

tundrabldr wrote:I purchased a Tundra in late fall of 09, paid the extra for the fast build kit, and still have 100 or so hours left to finish it. I flew the demo after a factory tour and fell in love with the performance and handling, took my wife on the demo flight, she is 5'10" and she was not to cramped in the back.
Factory support has been great (haven't had to call on them for much), have had 6 holes that did not line up and had to re-drill, but the CNC pre-punched holes has made the project easy and fun to build, bucked rivets are the way to go. I have not had to ask very hard to get either my son (10) or my daughter (12) to crawl inside tail section to hold the bucking bar during final assembly.
Their manual is a little vague in some spots, but if you read ahead and read about related parts I have been able to figure out what they were trying to accomplish.
I am using an Aerosport IO-375 with Light Speed ignition, and a constant speed MT 3 blade prop. I should be getting about 205-210 HP on mogas
My plan (work allowing) is to get it finished in the next 2 months.
I will be into it for about $110k when it makes the maiden flight, if I were to do it again, (start over) I would go the same way.
tundrabldr
tundrabldr wrote:....I am using an Aerosport IO-375 with Light Speed ignition, and a constant speed MT 3 blade prop. I should be getting about 205-210 HP on mogas.....
Oregon180 wrote:Now that's some solid advice there. I had to check Zane, and the backseatbabymakingpilot.org domain is available...
hotrod150 wrote:tundrabldr wrote:....I am using an Aerosport IO-375 with Light Speed ignition, and a constant speed MT 3 blade prop. I should be getting about 205-210 HP on mogas.....
If the new drivers license medical proposal passes, your airplane might be more useful & have better resale value if it was rated at only 180hp. What does the data plate on that engine say? I wonder if Bart would provide a new, lower-rated data plate, or if you could provide one yourself? It is an "experimental" engine , eh?

WingsOverPalawan wrote:Zane, have you checked out one of these?
hotrod150 wrote:tundrabldr wrote:....I am using an Aerosport IO-375 with Light Speed ignition, and a constant speed MT 3 blade prop. I should be getting about 205-210 HP on mogas.....
If the new drivers license medical proposal passes, your airplane might be more useful & have better resale value if it was rated at only 180hp. What does the data plate on that engine say? I wonder if Bart would provide a new, lower-rated data plate, or if you could provide one yourself? It is an "experimental" engine , eh?
EZFlap wrote:WingsOverPalawan wrote:Zane, have you checked out one of these?
Wow... looks like an episode of "Junkyard Wars" is being shot somewhere.
WWhunter wrote:My wife seems to think getting the house finished has priority...darn women....need to get their priorities straight!!
WWhunter wrote:There was a nearly completed kit in Prescott, Az I looked at last year for sale. Not sure if the guy still has it or not. They come up occassionally on various websites for sale also.
hotrod150 wrote:Even if you can put in 40 hrs a week on a project, a homebuilt from square one is gonna take a while (even a quick build). You can get a lot of Stinson for not too much money these days & be flying immediately. Plenty of them on barnstormers-- 4 pages of airplanes & parts but surprisingly no stinson button to click, you have to do a search.
Didn't chazdevil mention that his old 108/220 was for sale in Washington?
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