I appreciate everyone's thoughts. I've been excited about the first flight for a long time and you guys are helping me take an honest look at the best path forward.
Jim 541 wrote:Whee, been following your project and am excited for you coming down the home stretch.
Me too! I just hope the 'home stretch' doesn't turn into another year
Battson wrote:Our CAA (FAA) requires a detailed test plan be written, and I firmly believe this is necessary. You need to go through the process of anticipating as many problems as necessary, and what you'll do in each case.
Your emotional investment is also another stress-causing factor which needs to be considered seriously.
I agree with developing a test plan. I didn't do that for the other BH and it's phase 1 was pretty pointless.
My emotional investment is actually my main concern. I need to get into the frame of mind where I'd be focused on saving my life rather than trying to save the plane should something go wrong. I don't think I'm there yet.
gbflyer wrote:To be frank, if my loved ones lacked confidence in my piloting skills, I'd understand. If they lacked confidence in my building skills and expected me to risk someone else's hide in my flying heap instead of mine because of that, well...I'll just say I'd probably be spending several nights in the guest room in the after math.
Yep. It is a lack of proficiency on my part. I have confidence in what we have built but something could still go wrong and I'm not sure I'm the right guy to handle that unknown.
Troy Hamon wrote:It is pretty cool that you are getting close to the end of the build. Just remember to finish it as a skeptical maintenance manager, not as an excited pilot/owner.
For sure.
jcadwell wrote:I'd consider the test pilot. A significant benefit of a pilot with a lot of time in type is that they will also be highly familiar with what the finished product is supposed to look like, and will likely do a detailed inspection that can reveal anomalies. My Uncle built a Lancair; the test pilot was highly familiar with the airframe, and he found things on his inspection that weren't obvious, but were important. They were all simple to fix in a few hours, but things you wouldn't want to discover in the air.
It would be great to find a test pilot that has lots of BH experience but none exist around here. However, since Idaho is on many BH owners hit list I may be able to find someone willing to stop and give it a look before the first flight. Having someone else familiar with the type look it over would be a good thing.
Thanks again guys!