Hey, I had a Toyota Corona red four door as my high school car - I blew the motor up in it by getting in the car with my feet crossed and redlining it then dumping the clutch.
Never thought of cutting the top off....that must have been one sweet ride.
Was that $100 with or without the cut-off top?![]()
Spydermike
That looks like it will be a very nice craft when completed, what motor and performance will it have?
Why heck, Mike, looks like all you need are a couple of those wing thingies and you're good to go! Ever fly sailplanes? I went for a ride recently and had a blast. There were strong thermals that were like an express elevator all the way to 5,200' AGL, beautiful puffy clouds, and the guy let me land it. You can get a pretty sweet little glider for not a lot of bread. I may be hooked.
It looks like this nasty political discussion has degenerated into a nice auto/aircraft discussion
It sports a Continental IO240 (fuel injected, dual Light Speed Engineering Plasma III ignitions, fixed Sensenich wood prop).
Got the wings ready to plug in Daryl...I just need to finish sanding and painting.
I have been in a glider, but not as pilot. I agree, it is very fun. I used to fly hang gliders back in the 1970s. Have you tried paragliding? That too is an inexpensive way into the air, and you are hanging out there - really experiencing flight. I strongly suggest you try that (tandem paraglide flight) if you had fun soaring.
Regards,
Mike
Every time I go there I look around - I always see something new. I park my plane right by the tower near those new (vintage looking) hangars.
Here is a picture of my 8 year garage wart...and a picture of what it is supposed to look like finished (but without gear fairings).
Daryl,
The harnesses used in paragliders are like papooses - is that close enough?
Wow, I used papoose in a sentence - how many points do I get for that?
Maybe I'll give one of those a shot after the SLC! I've yet to get a pilots license, but it's on the list. My Dad got his when he was 68.Relatively speaking - not much.
The plane kit was 14,500. The engine 18,000, firewall forward kit 4,000, ignition system 2,500, prop less than 2,000. Avionics (EFIS, engine monitor, transponder, comm radio, intercom) about 10,000. Paint and HVLP system about 1,800. Various tools about 1,000. So what is that - about $54,000.
Now why did I have to go add all that up for....hey, that is one expensive garage wart, but it was spread out over about 5 years. That makes me feel better....then again, no it doesn't.
You can get into a homebuilt for maybe $30k if you want to. It is just like the thread on how much does a SLC cost...as much as you want to spend.
Mike
That is a 10-pointer for sure.....
Spydermike,
I've built three RV-4's in the past. All metal, Conti power (150) from plans. So long ago the kits were not available. Took about a year for each one. Idea was to sell two to pay for mine. Not even close..
I did sell two, kept one for awhile then sold that before I moved from PHX to Northern CA, then on to FL. One of my clients was near Redmond and before LanceAir moved, I would occasionally take a demo flt. Chomping at the bit to build a pressurized LanceAir! Don't think the spouse would be to excited though. Have enough in my SL-C right now.
Maybe I'll give one of those a shot after the SLC! I've yet to get a pilots license, but it's on the list. My Dad got his when he was 68.
Can I get machine guns on mine?By the way - this is going to be my paint scheme...my father in law was a WWII Marine pilot flying SBDs and TBMs off small escort carriers...this is kind of a tribute to him. Hope I don't muck it up.
The colors might end up a little different, but you can get the idea.