Welcome!
I'm a non-builder / second owner of a Legacy Sonex with Aerovee. I've put 350 hours on it since I bought it from the builder 30 months ago including a top overhaul just shy of 500 hours. Couple of 1600 mile cross countries and a lot of local stuff. See this trip report from this summer that includes some notes about managing the AeroVee in hot weather.
viewtopic.php?f=17&t=6884mrpilotron wrote:The plane I'm buying is definitely not a pristine show plane
Mine lives in the tie downs. It looks nice about once a year after a big polish - otherwise it looks clean. It is a "working" plane.
mrpilotron wrote:1) The brakes were unable to hold against even an 1800 RPM runup.
If it is the stock brake shoes and drums with a single wire system. Pull the drums and check the shoes have any friction material on them. Replace as necessary. Make SURE the drums are in round with the wheels to avoid them snatching if running with any eccentricity. Snatching will strip brake material off these fairly cheap shoes in a heartbeat. Then adjust wire to tighten the system and slightly preload the wire - just enough that the brakes are just off working. This will hold the plane on an 1,800rpm run up - till they won't and you have to tighten the wires again as the shoes wear. Oil inside the drums is a little unusual.
mrpilotron wrote:2) As noted above, oil on the belly is coming from leaky pushrod tubes that the seller just replaced.
See the thread Bryan mentioned about trying to get an AeroVee absolutely tight. Good Luck....... :-)
mrpilotron wrote:3) Climb performance was underwhelming at best.
The plane with an AeroVee is NOT a homesick angel. I plan on 1,800ft at maximum gross on a standard day. If the DA is higher expect to use more. 500ft per minute if it is a standard day. On the trip above I was using 5,000ft runways for safety (3,000 used in high DA's of 4,000ft or so) and expecting 2-300ft per minute if things were cool.
mrpilotron wrote:Landing approach came down quickly as soon as power was reduced. It felt like he came in a little hot with quite a bit of throttle still applied, then pulled power and floated a long way before touching down. We used over 4000 feet of runway due to the previously mentioned lack of brakes.
Standard day - coming in over the threshold JUST off a stall and touching down - I will use 1,000ft most days and 1,500 to 1,800 at maximum gross if I am being gentle with the brakes. You can stop shorter - but it's tough on the brakes. Took me at least 40-50 landings before I dialed it in.
mrpilotron wrote:Not sure about the prop that needs to go with the turbo.
At least with the Prince P-Tip - it's a different prop for the turbo compared to non-turbo.
mrpilotron wrote:4) There is something wrong with the starter ring gear. He had to rotate the prop by hand to a place the starter would bite and spin the prop. I expect to replace the ring gear, but I'm not sure why it has this problem in the first place. The engine only has 65 hours on it so I suspect an alignment problem.
If the engine is good shape and the prop correctly installed the engine will stop with the prop horizontal. 50/50 chance as to which way it stops. So there are just two locations on the ring gear that will present to the starter. 180 out from each other. If the ring is chipped (sounds like it is) then you have a 50/50 chance of stopping on the chip. Flipping the prop over 180 will get you on the non-chip for a start. But as the starter whirls a chipped ring gear then things will deteriorate fairly quickly and you will keep losing teeth near the first lost tooth. Sounds like he was fiddling to get to some good teeth. There is a thread on here somewhere about a starter fitted TOO in mesh when engaged which causes gears to chip.
mrpilotron wrote:5) Age has done what it does to both fuel lines and the canopy. I will replace all the fuel lines while I have the engine off for the starter gear replacement. I might do the canopy too.
If nothing else - review:
https://www.faa.gov/documentLibrary/med ... w-chg1.pdfSection 3 - Transparent Plastics
and consider stop drilling the spider webs or double the material A canopy disappearing in flight is "interesting" (happened to me).