Sonerai13 wrote:I never raise the tail on takeoff in a 3300 powered Sonex. I just fly it off three-point. That will give you the shortest ground roll. In fact, I only slightly raise the tail on an AeroVee powered Sonex. I find that most pilots raise the tail too high when making takeoffs in tailwheel airplanes (not just Sonex), usually to the point where they unnecessarily extend their ground roll.
That's my observation as well (AeroVee). I spent a year and a half taking off with the tail up in the air. I then changed to 3 point take-offs and I definitely find my take-off roll is shorter. That's on pavement. On grass I definitely get the tail wheel off the ground, but as Joe suggests, don't over do it.
For what it's worth, I would never ever consider taking off or landing in a 30 kt wind, even if it were straight down the runway. A 20 kt cross wind can ruin all your years of work on the airplane. It's just not worth it. Maybe a nose dragger is different, but I would much rather be on the ground wishing I was in the air, than being nose down in the weeds.
Consider that, "A tropical cyclone in which the maximum sustained surface wind speed ranges from 34 kt (39 mph,17.5 m/s) to 63 kt (73 mph, 32.5 m/s)." So a 30 kt wind is rather close to a tropical storm wind speed.