by Sonerai13 » Thu May 24, 2018 9:20 am
Ok, I'll weigh in here, for what it's worth. I have many hours in all the factory airplanes, plus a number of hours in various customer airplanes. In my experience, there is NO measurable performance or difference between the Waiex and the Sonex. You really can't tell which one you're flying unless you look out and see what tail is back there! Now, having said that, there are always small differences between one individual airplane and another. These airplanes are all unique unto themselves, so there will always be small differences that may or may not be noticeable.
As for crosswinds, I can say from experience that the factory Waiex could handle any crosswind that the Sonex could. I landed that airplane in a howling direct crosswind that was more than 20 knots and it handled it fine. Yes, it was work, but it did it. Wouldn't want to do it on every flight, but it could be done. The straight-tail airplanes handle crosswinds very well indeed. I'd say that either airplane will handle winds that most pilots would be uncomfortable with.
So, here comes my personal opinion on the subject. If I were making the choice, it would be a straight tail. It's lighter, it's easier to build, and it's easier to move around by hand on the ground as well. You just grab the leading edges of the horizontal stabilizer, pick up the tail, and move the plane where you want. That's not as easy to do on the Waiex. For me, the weight would be the biggest deal, but I'm a bit of a weight "nazi" (to use a non-PC term).
One small item to nit-pick - the Waiex is a Y tail, not a V tail. It has a small conventional rudder under the "V", which makes it a Y.
Remember, this advice is worth exactly what you paid for it!! :)
Joe Norris
Sonex N208GD (S/N 450)
Sonerai II N13NN (S/N 1206)
Fortes Fortuna Adiuvat