by GordonTurner » Mon Jul 28, 2014 7:30 pm
Hi Texfly,
I'm building a Waiex, so I can't give you an exact run-down on cost to operate yet, but I have owned several planes in the past.
First, the best advice in here by far is fly it a lot, that spreads out the fixed costs. More importantly, it will make you feel confident with your plane and positive about what it does cost. There's no free lunch out there, but the sonex is small and efficient and really about as inexpensive as your going to get short of hanging the lawnmower off the back of your beach chair.
You should have a good idea of the fixed costs before you get in. These really won't go away and if you're in over your head on these you'll never enjoy it. Then figure out what you can set aside for flying, which is basically gas and (everything else). Decide what you're going to set aside per hour for the everything else, then make it work. I know, not very scientific and a little tricky to graph in 3D, but your plane isn't a statistic, it's a thing that breaks when it feels like it and generally runs fine for a really long time in between.
Corvair Power. Go to FlyCorvair.net and FlyCorvair.com, same guy, two complementary sites full of a ton of info. I'm building (with assistance) my own Corvair engine and I have become very impressed. It's a great choice, but it will require you to get more involved with your motor than the other choices. In the end, the plane pretty much comes down to the motor anyway.
Contact me anytime, good luck. Gordon
Waiex 158 New York. N88YX registered.
3.0 Liter Corvair built, run, and installed.
Garmin panel, Shorai LiFePo batteries.