You guys have really missed the point here. This accident wasn't caused by the 1250 gross weight. He was flying solo, certainly under gross. How many Sonex have crashed because of an in-flight breakup caused by overstress due to a gross weight set above the 1150 factory recommendation? How many aircraft of any type have crashed recently because of overstress due to loading beyond gross weight? If you want to argue the performance issue, well there are a lot of situations you can be in where you are under 1150 lbs and still weigh too much for the runway length, DA, etc. I bet my 120HP Corvair, even if loaded to 1250 lbs(hypothetical as my gross is not set at 1250), needs less runway and would out climb an Aerovee powered Sonex at factory recommended gross anyhow. I'm neither recommending nor condemning a gross weight set above factory recommendations, we should all make our own decisions for our own reasons.
Now let's focus on the most probable cause of this accident, and arguably a much more dangerous situation. This was the textbook carb ice situation. Cool temperatures, moisture, low power settings in the traffic pattern. The pilot failed to apply carb heat until
after the engine stopped. He then only applied
partial carb heat to attempt a restart. Carb ice is dangerous guys. If using an MA3 type carb, as I suspect this Corvair powered Sonex was using, FULL carb heat should be used at ALL TIMES with reduced power settings. This is not something to forget or be lazy about. I use carb heat with reduced power settings even on the warmest, dryest day.
Here is a good article written on the dangers of carb ice, especially as applied to Corvairs:
http://www.flycorvair.com/carbice.html