avee8r wrote:I'm seriously thinking about FLYING the airplane out of the slightly sketchy airport it's currently hangared (CA33) at rather than transporting it back to my favored Phase I base (KCCR).
As an EAA Flight Advisor - Sonex Builder - and concerned fellow aviator, please step back and take a good "Sonex Reality Check" about the above statement.
I Highly Recommend taking the time and effort to make your first flight(s) from KCCR. If you've put enough thought into knowing that KCCR is the right place for your test flight, then the right thing to do is make your first flight(s) out of KCCR. You won't be sorry, I promise!
I was in the exact same position when I finished my Sonex in 2012. I took the time and trouble to disassemble, move, and reassemble the finished plane only 6 miles. It can be done safely. I was rewarded with a first flight that had a hiccup that was easily handled instead of one that in hindsight, might have had a totally different outcome.
Happy Landings
John
N50NX
I appreciate the concern!
I've already made the decision I WILL NOT be making the first flight in ANY event, for reasons of insurance, lack of total time, lack of RECENT total time, lack of time in TYPE, etc. If the very qualified CFI that WILL be doing the first flight doesn't like the options out of CA35 (not CA33...I miswrote), it's not going to happen THERE. KCCR is closer to the operating area I'll be assigned, has MULTIPLE runways, a tower, a fire department, I have chapter mates all over the field with tools and expertise, etc; no doubt it's the BETTER place, and once I'm in the plane, that's where Phase 1 WILL happen.
When I get the bump in the T-deck fixed, the ignition sorted, the engine the way I want it to be, maybe I'll be OVER my peeve at what a PITA this was.
In retrospect, the bump could have been prevented, BTW, with a 2 x 4 clamped to the door track on each side, but I THOUGHT the arrangement we rigged was good enough, and I was running out of daylight. It was a classic accident scenario enfolding, but only the airplane got hurt, and only a little bit at that.
Oh, and when we got to CA35, there was an overhead "fence" at the drive thru gate that hadn't been there 3 days before, and we couldn't drive the truck to the hangar! And had to push the fuselage and the wing rack about 1/4 mile! Luckily one of the PC12s based at the field pulled up while we were unloading and loaned us their tug....