SonexN76ET wrote:Noel,
I think you need to respect my friend Kip's opinion. He has flown his Jab 3300 Waiex to 48 states and out to Catalina Island among other remote areas. He is a highly experienced international corporate jet pilot so he knows a thing or two.
Jake - I appreciate you coming to Kip's defense. I phrased my statements as questions because they are that: Questions. I didn't accuse Kip of anything or belittle him, and I certainly don't want to turn this thread into a religious war over powerplants. I quite literally do not understand why some people put such a high priority on a certified engine, and what I'm trying to do is wrap my head around it. Hearing people express what they see in such a solution will help me. I also want to allow for the possibility that I don't know something about certified engines that they do. Maybe this questioning approach is my IT background showing through - I am asked at work all the time for a specific solution or a specific piece of software, but often the person's underlying need is much more general; or sometimes its quite different than what they are verbalizing. On one hand, I can't know their workflow - so I need them to talk to me about their needs; I can't dictate solutions. And on the other hand, I may know of a tool or solution that fits their needs better than what they're asking for. But neither of us
knows what the right solution is until we get a common understanding of the true goal / requirements / priorities. To bring this back to aircraft building: If I didn't know about metal-working tools, I might ask someone for a lot of sandpaper to help me smooth out rough metal. Someone would have to ask me "hey, why do you want this sandpaper? What kind of rough stuff are you trying to smooth out?" in order to understand that I am trying to deal with the rough edges on all these holes I'm drilling. Only then could they describe deburring tools to me, and explain to me why that's better than buying sandpaper. :)
Kip - Fair enough, peace of mind is a legitimate factor. I do have a difference of opinion on this subject; but that's all it is. I strongly agree with Jake's comments about the whole system being safety-related. A poorly-thought-out fuel system, or unsafe wiring, or bad accessories in the engine-compartment turn the best engines into a death-trap. And I'm probably also biased because I used to wrench on race-cars of various kinds (NASCAR, SCCA, Trans-Am, ICSCC). I've help out with several different engine-builds and am blasé about a subject that used to be very intimidated by. Or perhaps I'm just egotistical enough to trust my handiwork more than I trust some faceless person who's mind is thinking about god-knows-what as they assemble an engine that
they won't be hanging
their butt on the line for. :P
Can we all agree that we wish we had a "B Model" airframe, though? :D
One thing I haven't seen anyone comment on yet is the proposed plastic interior panels. Awesome touch, or prone to wear and looking bad after a couple of years? And are they really lighter/better than a thin fiberglass or sheetmetal cover would be?
--Noel
P.S. Keith - No, reports are that one is under construction but not yet flying. They seem to be very confident in their numbers, but I'm
very curious to see what structural changes they made to avoid gaining a bunch of weight!