Groundlooper wrote:
Not trying to hijack the thread, but doesn't taking a certificated airpane into the experimental category imposed a lot more restrictions on where and when it can be flown than one that was built as an experimental???
BCP Poser
I think you can take a pile of certified parts from different models of certified aircraft and build an experimental aircraft and fly it with no more restrictions than any other experimental. But if you for instance just put an auto engine in a certified aircraft then it would not be an aircraft built primarily for "personal education or recreational purposes." That pretty much defines the normal experimental category. The aircraft was still originally built by the manufacturer for the purpose of sale. That aircraft may be experimental in nature but will fall under the more restrictive use of Experimental Exhibition. I don't know where the tipping point is on how many parts need to be changed.
Canada has another class of experimental planes for those with older certifieds that don't want to put up with unfindable or prohibitively expensive parts. They can take a certified plane and modify or fabricate those parts and do the work on it themselves. I believe once in that category they cannot go back. I know one man in B.C. who added several feet of wing to a salvaged 180 and will fly it in that category. It is somewhat similar to the St. Just Super Cyclone. (Which I also dreamed about for a while.)
The two seater of my dreams was the Montaigne Mountain Goat STOL.
Specs and performance here. http://www.bushplanes.com/specification ... mance.html Unfortunately not in production yet.
What Skystrider wrote about the number of hours invested to build a plane weighed heavy in my decision to go with the quick build option. I got a bonus that year when for promotional purposes the company offered a factory assist free for the first three kits sold.




Good points, just too rational. You guys are smart. I'm not looking to make sense. 